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Question
Dear Education First
  My dad wont let me go to china because they think its not safe enough to go half a world away. Do people get there heads cut off or is that just a myth my dad told me. What do you think is it safe or not ?

Answer
Hi Kristen,
I think your dad is confused with some other country. Show him this new photobook CHINA: Portrait of a People for a sense of how friendly and warm and gentle Chinese people actually are.
http://www.blacksmithbooks.com/9789889979942.htm
I am positive this book will change his opinion and allow you to come to China.

Secondly, read this article about crime in China. Of course it has its share of crime, but statistically it is one of the safest countries in the world to travel, and compared to America it is a utopia.

Crime in China
by Tom Carter
http://www.bjreview.com.cn/eye/txt/2006-12/17/content_51150.htm

Perhaps the single most reassuring fact about travel in the People’s Republic of China is its remarkably low crime rate.

The Ministry of Public Security (MPS), the principal authority of domestic criminal procedures, earlier this year announced a 15 percent decline in violent crime (4.5 million reported cases for 2005), while common property infringement incidents such as theft, fraud and robbery, which account for 80 percent of all cases, rose by only 1 percent.

Cosmopolitan cities such as Beijing and Shanghai, which annually attract tens of millions of overseas visitors on business or holiday, applaud themselves for providing public order and relatively safe city streets where one can walk at just about any hour in relative safety.

But all is not necessarily quiet on the home front. In an uncharacteristically candid public admission, the MPS has reported a pandemic of illicit drug trafficking in China led by an increasing number of foreign crime syndicates, reportedly from the African regimes of Nigeria and Liberia and triads from neighboring Asian countries.

Moreover, violent crime on the southern shore is notoriously rampant in Guangdong, making it the only province in China’s mainland to arm police with guns.

Nor is this to say that Westerners are entirely exempt from either being the victim of, or committing, more serious crimes.

I have found myself in several situations while traveling extensively throughout China. I fondly remember the street gang who confronted me in a darkened alley in Inner Mongolia, or facing off with a pickpocket in crowded Qianmen hutong in Beijing with a baying crowd of onlookers taking great delight in watching a 196cm waiguoren vigilante.

Then there was that time in Chongqing. Not exactly heralded as a top tourist destination, the interior municipality of Chongqing, located on the rusty banks of the Yangtz River, uncannily resembles a lawless early-century port-of-call of maritime merchants, hardened dock laborers and waterfront brothels.

An overnight stay in a small hotel on the outskirts of China’s largest, and hottest, city, turned into a midnight brawl after a polite request on my part to ask three obviously drunk men loitering in the hallway to settle down, was met with a hostile response.

A push on their part led to a not gentle shove on mine, sending one of the menflying back into his two friends. The next few moments were a feral blur, and for a short time I laudably held my own. But six bare fists can infallibly do more damage than two. The tough guys retreated into the night, leaving me breathless and battered.

The police arrived thereafter and took me to the Public Security Bureau to get a statement. It was determined that the hotel security guards failed to serve their purpose, and it was also found that the hotel did not follow strict municipal protocol in copying the three perpetrators’ identification cards before accommodating them, which would have assisted the police in their investigation.

This meant that it was my right under Chinese law to demand an immediate financial settlement from the hotel proprietor—for my troubles, you see—though it hardly made up for the bang up job those inebriated gentlemen did on me.

To be sure, the aforementioned incident is an isolated one, with a great majority of expatriates being lucky, or not, to see so much action during their stay in China (”I was overcharged!” seems to be the leading complaint).

With only one police officer for every thousand residents in a population of 1.3 billion, and more than 40 percent of mainland precincts having fewer than five officers, compounded with a general lack of funding, resources or state-of-the-art technology, China’s police ought to be commended for maintaining an impressively low national crime rate.

Let there be no mistake: Xinhua News Agency has reported that there were twice as many reported criminal cases in 2005 than in 1990, and six times that of 1980. But compared to hyper-violent icons of the wild West such as Los Angeles and New York, it is no wonder that China is witnessing an increasing number of foreigners residing in its gleaming municipalities. China remains one of the statistically safest countries to visit, and the rest of the world would do well to take notice.

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China & Hong Kong

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Tom Carter ~ Travel China Expert

Expertise


I am an American photojournalist and travel correspondent based in Beijing and have traveled extensively to all 33 provinces in China. I specialize in budget travel and have a personal affection for remote villages, ethnic minority culture and uncharted locales.

Experience

I am also the author of CHINA: Portrait of a People, the most comprehensive book of photography on modern China ever published by a single author.

Education/Credentials
American University, Washington, D.C., BA Political Science, Communications, 1997

Interviews
To learn more about Tom Carter's ground-breaking travels across China - and be inspired to make some of your own - check out the following media coverage:
CNN interviews Tom Carter
Beijing Today interviews Tom Carter
ChinaTravel.Net interviews Tom Carter
Christian Science Monitor reviews CPOP
SF Chronicle reviews CPOP
China.Org reviews CPOP
China Daily reviews CPOP

Note
Help support Tom Carter by purchasing a copy of CHINA: Portrait of a People today.


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