During the National Day and Mid-Autumn Festival holiday, the Ruili Immigration Border Inspection Station of Yunnan Immigration Border Inspection General Station, stationed at the China-Myanmar border, innovatively implemented a "technology empowerment + precise control + efficient service" model to ensure orderly and smooth immigration procedures.
During the holiday period, the China-Myanmar Pawbo Carnival and the 2025 Dehong Border Trade Fair were held simultaneously, resulting in significant flows of people and goods at Ruili Port. How to predict clearance volumes in advance and efficiently manage personnel and vehicles became a key focus for the Ruili Immigration Border Inspection Station.
Recently, officers at the Ruili Immigration Border Inspection Station were seen inspecting passenger documents.
"Previously, ensuring clearance for major events relied on manual statistics and on-site coordination. Now, relying on the intelligent system developed by our station, we can intelligently analyze various clearance requirements, making our work more precise and efficient," said Cha Yufei, Deputy Director of the Border Inspection Department at Ruili Immigration Border Inspection Station.
On October 1st, the Ruili Immigration Border Inspection Station leveraged relevant port platforms to integrate clearance data, historical records, and real-time traffic information, identifying passenger flow peaks in advance and triggering early warnings. Upon receiving the alert, officers quickly activated emergency response protocols, adding additional channels to the existing inspection lanes and establishing dedicated "festival channels."
All 12 channels at Ruili Port are equipped with self-service inspection equipment, supporting "facial recognition + document verification" for rapid clearance of exhibition participants.
Around 10 AM on October 3rd, urgent cries for help echoed through the immigration channel at Ruili Port: Myanmar border resident Ai Ai Mei was holding her 3-year-old son, whose face had turned blue-purple, clutching half a box of children's fever reducer and shouting, "My child has a fever, 39 degrees Celsius, I need to get to a Chinese hospital."
Officer Wang Jia, who was on duty nearby, immediately approached and discovered the child was experiencing convulsions. He comforted Ai Ai Mei in Burmese while reporting to leadership via radio and calling for activation of the "emergency assistance special channel."
Within 30 seconds, the duty team leader led another officer to open the "emergency assistance special channel." Auxiliary police arrived simultaneously with a first aid kit, quickly providing physical cooling treatment for the child. Meanwhile, officers contacted the hospital to coordinate an ambulance on standby. From Ai Ai Mei's request for help to the child being loaded into the ambulance, the entire process took only 5 minutes.
On the morning of October 4th, a heartwarming scene unfolded at the freight channel of Ruili Immigration Border Inspection Station: Chinese truck driver Yan Nong was driving a truck loaded with 2 tons of fertilizer purchased from the border trade fair, preparing to exit the country. While queuing, he discovered his border resident certificate and cargo clearance documents were missing.
"I need to rush to Yangon for delivery this afternoon. Without the documents, I can't make the delivery!" Yan Nong was sweating profusely with anxiety and was about to rush into the traffic to search. Officer Wang Lin immediately stopped him, calming his emotions while reporting to leadership and reviewing video footage.
It turned out that another Chinese truck driver, Yan Wang, had accidentally taken Yan Nong's documents when collecting his own, as their ID numbers were consecutive and the documents looked similar. Wang Lin quickly coordinated with customs departments, located Yan Wang's contact information and the lane he was about to clear through, and retrieved the documents in just 10 minutes.
According to statistics, during the 2025 Dehong Border Trade Fair period, the Ruili Immigration Border Inspection Station used an "advance registration, centralized verification, staggered release" model, cumulatively saving clearance time for 65 border trade trucks and properly handling 8 requests for assistance involving document mix-ups and lost items.
As of October 6th, the Ruili Immigration Border Inspection Station successfully completed clearance guarantee tasks for 36 overseas delegations and over 20 participating enterprises, with border trade fair cargo clearance volume reaching 16,000 tons, an increase of 15% year-over-year.