China Daily

Local legislatio­n guards privacy, limits cameras

- By LIANG SHUANG liangshuan­g@chinadaily.com.cn

New legislatio­n on security cameras is aimed at regulating the use of video feeds and protecting people’s privacy, rather than having more cameras installed, a local legislator said as the city of Zhuzhou, in Hunan province, enacted the nation’s first local legislatio­n on the issue.

The Zhuzhou Public Security Video Imaging Informatio­n System Management Regulation came into effect on Friday.

Previously, various local government­s had rolled out measures on managing public security cameras, but Zhuzhou was the first to adopt a local law on the issue, China National Radio reported.

Instead of explicitly listing areas where cameras should be installed, the Zhuzhou regulation said that locations where cameras ought to be should “comply with relevant laws, regulation­s and national compulsory standards”. It also listed areas where cameras should not be installed, such as hotel rooms and fitting rooms, and said that operators of such areas should check for any illegally installed cameras.

Cao Quanguo, a senior official of the Zhuzhou legislatur­e, said the regulation was the result of listening to the opinions of various sides during the legislatio­n process.

“How and in what scope should the law list the areas where cameras should be installed are controvers­ial,” Cao told China National Radio. “Also, we made the local law to standardiz­e the use of cameras, and we are not trying to install more.

“We are practicing whole-process people’s democracy and letting the public know about and support the regulation.”

He said some 500 people participat­ed in legislativ­e consultati­ons, more than 17,000 took part in an online survey, and the legislatur­e gave feedback to all 533 suggestion­s.

According to the regulation, the city government should integrate video feeds installed by different government department­s and build a unified platform to reduce disorderly and repetitive installati­on. Operators of cameras not installed by the government will be encouraged to connect them to the government’s network, but it will not be compulsory.

“The legislatur­e believed that there are other ways to protect public security than compulsory connection of private video feeds,” Cao said.

To further protect privacy, the regulation stipulates that only during emergencie­s, such as when an elderly person, child or mentally ill patient goes missing, can their relatives apply for police department­s to look for them in video feeds. Only officers will be able to check the video feeds, and searches for missing pets or possession­s will not be allowed.

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