The New Zealand Herald

China’s crackdown

As worries grow in China about a second wave of Covid-19 infections, Sophia Yan looks at how authoritie­s are taking a heavy-handed approach to keep any outbreak under control

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China’s sophistica­ted surveillan­ce network is being used to enforce coronaviru­s rules, with officials in monitoring rooms shouting at offenders through loudspeake­rs if they spy an infringeme­nt.

Authoritie­s have also mobilised grid-style policing, raising thousands of volunteers to monitor residents and escort people for testing.

Monetary rewards have been offered for informing on sick people, and cameras are installed on people’s doors to enforce quarantine­s.

The increasing­ly draconian steps are raising fears of a new age of surveillan­ce in China, with smartphone monitoring and facial recognitio­n systems expanded into all aspects of life.

In Donghan village in Hubei, the province where the coronaviru­s emerged late last year, Liu Ganhe, a member of the “grid” of local officials monitoring the area through cameras, saw six villagers gathering without masks, so he called the authoritie­s.

“Village cadres rushed to the scene to disperse the crowd and educate the people,” state media said, praising the “wartime restrictio­ns” the system was able to enforce. The system in the area cost 40 million yuan ($8.8m) and has more than 4400 cameras, the

If they have all your data, I don’t know if they will ever delete it. Xue Linlin, real estate worker

report added. In Xiangtan, a city in Hunan, the state media has published pictures of officials watching multiple screens in police stations. Others show volunteer staff scouring footage and sharing clips on messaging apps.

“The pandemic has given the opportunit­y for companies and the Government to legitimise highly intrusive systems,” said Maya Wang, senior China researcher for Human Rights Watch.

“The coronaviru­s has enabled authoritie­s to deepen and push for greater acceptance . . . not because these systems are really great, but because people really have no choice.”

Zhou Jiangyong, the Communist Party secretary overseeing Hangzhou — where China’s contact tracing apps were first deployed — has called the programmes “an important practice” that should be expanded, according to state media.

Right on cue, city officials last month proposed expanding the current “health code” programme — a contagion risk profile that determines if a person’s travel and contact history requires quarantine — into a wider monitoring platform. It would collate personal details, including medical history and habits, such as exercise, alcohol consumed, and hours slept.

Over the last few years, China has sunk billions into facial recognitio­n surveillan­ce systems, and is even building a DNA database of men and boys, saying such tools would aid crime prevention.

It remains unclear how quickly authoritie­s can access and make use of the data, though such mass collection can be used for more sinister means.

In far western Xinjiang, technology and human surveillan­ce already tracks if Muslims pray too much — deemed by the regime an early sign of “terrorism” and a reason for them to be sent to “reeducatio­n” camps.

“My biggest concern is about privacy,” said Xue Linlin, 26, who works for a real estate developer in Hangzhou. “If they have all your data, I don’t know if they will ever delete it, or what happens if the informatio­n gets leaked. Will being in a poor health condition become a reason companies don’t want to employ you?”—

Telegraph Group Ltd

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Residents line up to get tested at a coronaviru­s testing centre in Beijing.
Photo / AP Residents line up to get tested at a coronaviru­s testing centre in Beijing.

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