I thought this was interesting because it says that "It is the first time a Chinese temple has set up such a team". I thought that the Shaolin temples invented kung fu precisely for self-defence reasons. Wouldn't martial arts be better than shields, batons and pepper spray? Though perhaps it would take longer to train to fight using martial arts than these weapons.
Chinese Buddhist temple forms "anti-terrorist" squadhttp://www.chicagotribune.com/news/sns-rt-us-china-temple-20140403,0,4460999.storyReuters
6:29 a.m. CDT, April 3, 2014
BEIJING (Reuters) - Nervous about a repeat of last month's deadly knife attack at a Chinese train station, a well-known Buddhist temple in eastern China has drafted some of its monks into a new "anti-terrorist" squad, state media said on Thursday.
The team at the 1,700-year-old Lingyin Temple in the tourist city of Hangzhou is made up of 20 monks and more than 20 security guards, the official Xinhua news agency quoted the temple's Buddhist Master Jueheng as saying.
The squad's members are equipped with shields, pepper spray and batons. It is the first time a Chinese temple has set up such a team, Xinhua said.
"The squad members practice Buddhism in the day and take part in training exercises at night," Jueheng said, adding police helped with the training.
"We set up the squad to guard against violence and terrorist attacks in a bid to protect the safety of visitors and Buddhism believers."
The China News Service said the idea sprang from last month's attack at the Kunming train station in southwestern China, blamed on militants from the far western region of Xinjiang. Thirty-three people died, including four of the attackers, shot dead by police.
That incident "attracted the attention of temple authorities", the report said.
China remains jittery after that incident and after a vehicle ploughed into tourists on the edge of Tiananmen Square last October, killing the three people in the car and two bystanders. China labeled that incident a suicide attack by Xinjiang militants.
Such violence has, however, generally been confined to Xinjiang and the targets are normally the security forces or government officials, rather than tourist or religious sites.
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Ron Popeski)