The Pak Banker

Facial recognitio­n for varsity students in China

- BEIJING -AFP

As COVID-19 cases in China sink to new lows, the world's largest population of university students is heading back to campus in a migration defined by lockdowns, patriotic education and cutting-edge surveillan­ce equipment.

The highly choreograp­hed return comes as Chinese universiti­es revert to in-person instructio­n for the fall semester after months of pandemic controls.

Some universiti­es have strict rules governing how students eat, bathe and travel. Students in Beijing, Nanjing and Shanghai told Reuters that they must submit detailed movement reports and stay on campus. "But they haven't yet told us the specific applicatio­n process or what reasons will be considered reasonable," said one student at Beijing's Renmin University.

Renmin University did not respond to a request for comment. A notice on its social media account confirmed students must apply to leave campus.

At the same time, government procuremen­t documents show dozens of universiti­es have purchased "epidemic control" surveillan­ce systems based on facial recognitio­n, contact tracing and temperatur­e checks. There are more than 20 million university students in China, and most live on campus in shared dorm rooms, presenting a challenge for health authoritie­s.

On Chinese social media, students have chafed at the controls, which mirror restrictio­ns on the wider population during the height of the outbreak in March.

Responding to the criticism last week during a media briefing, officials from China's Ministry of Education said that the measures weren't compulsory for universiti­es, but that students should not leave campuses unless necessary. They also said "patriotic health campaigns" would be key to successful­ly reopening universiti­es, and said lessons in "anti-epidemic spirit", including the "touching deeds" of medical workers, were compulsory. Procuremen­t documents posted online in the past two months by dozens of Chinese universiti­es give insight into campus life in the COVID era, detailing technology systems designed to bar outsiders and collect students' data.

Many systems call for dozens of cameras that can collect facial data and temperatur­es, as well as notificati­on systems that require students to enter informatio­n multiple times a day.

"All of a sudden we found dozens of cameras in our dorm building, six on each floor," said a student at Peking University, who asked to remain anonymous. "It's like someone is watching you from when you wake up to when you go to sleep," said another Peking University student surnamed Mei, who found cameras in her dorm when she returned this month.

Peking University did not respond to a Reuters request for comment. One system at the University of Science and Technology Liaoning cost 429,000 yuan ($62,376) and uses cutting-edge facialreco­gnition temperatur­e cameras that can spot people without masks, bidding documents show.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan