Border officers dedicated to work
Dakaihe station vital bulwark in Yunnan province
At this checkpoint on a busy highway, the front line is not marked by fences or slogans, but by vigilance, restraint and a rigorous sense of duty, as exemplified by 35-year-old Li Binghui, a veteran immigration police officer whose career mirrors the station's evolution.
Over his 17 years of service, Li has participated in solving more than 560 cross-border crime cases, arrested 1,831 suspects, cracked 221 drug cases and helped seize 2.6 tons of narcotics. His colleagues describe him as calm, meticulous and relentlessly curious.
Li's defining contribution, however, is his embrace of data-driven policing. Recognizing the limits of manpower at a high-volume checkpoint, he helped establish an intelligence analysis center and led the development of early-warning models tailored to Xishuangbanna's unique geography and crime patterns.
Li's team built systems capable of flagging high-risk individuals and vehicles before they even reach the checkpoint. These models now push daily alerts based on behavioral patterns, travel history and network associations, effectively moving the border control line forward.
One case in 2021 began with a single phone number — no name, location or transaction record. For months, Li sifted through tens of thousands of call logs, reconstructing communication patterns line by line. Each new lead revealed further connections, requiring constant reassessment.
For two months, Li practically lived in the office, reviewing surveillance footage frame by frame. The effort ultimately paid off when his team dismantled a major drug trafficking ring operating from the China-Myanmar border to inland provinces, resulting in the arrest of 51 suspects and seizure of 116 kg of drugs.
High-profile cases aside, Li said the moments that stay with him are often quieter.
In 2024, he encountered three teenagers who had been lured by promises of quick wealth abroad and were preparing to cross the border illegally. Through patient conversation and advice, Li persuaded them to abandon the plan. When their parents traveled from Jiangsu province to retrieve them, the teens clasped their hands and wept in gratitude. "That's when you feel the weight of this job," Li said. "We're not just stopping crimes — we're protecting families."
The cost, however, has been deeply personal. Long hours and sudden deployments have kept Li away from home.
During his wife's pregnancy in 2019, he was immersed in a critical drug investigation and often unable to return. His wife attended most medical appointments alone. Once, when she suffered severe leg cramps late at night, he could only offer comfort over the phone.
Their daughter, now 5, once told her kindergarten teacher that her father "only plays with computers". On one birthday, Li planned to return home but was delayed by an urgent call. When he finally arrived late at night, he found a handmade card on the table: "Happy birthday to my computer daddy."
For his service, Li has received multiple honors, including two first-class merits and a second-class merit. But recognition is not what keeps him going.
In the sweltering heat of the rainforest, amid endless streams of vehicles and the constant pressure of hidden threats, Li and his colleagues remain stoically vigilant. Their work is rarely visible, often misunderstood, and always demanding. Yet for millions of travelers who pass through the station each year without incident, that invisibility is precisely the point.
yangzekun@chinadaily.com.cn

































