San Francisco Chronicle

Huawei snooping tech spreads amid backlash

- By Dusan Stojanovic Dusan Stojanovic is an Associated Press writer.

BELGRADE, Serbia — When hundreds of video cameras with the power to identify and track individual­s started appearing in the streets of Belgrade as part of a major surveillan­ce project, some protesters began having second thoughts about joining antigovern­ment demonstrat­ions in the Serbian capital.

Local authoritie­s assert the system, created by Chinese telecommun­ications company Huawei, helps reduce crime in the city of 2 million. Critics contend it erodes personal freedoms, makes political opponents vulnerable to retributio­n and even exposes the country’s citizens to snooping by the Chinese government.

The cameras, equipped with facial recognitio­n technology, are being rolled out across hundreds of cities around the world, particular­ly in poorer countries with weak track records on human rights where Beijing has increased its influence through big business deals. With the United States claiming that Chinese state authoritie­s can get backdoor access to Huawei data, the aggressive rollout is raising concerns about the privacy of millions of people in countries with little power to stand up to China.

“The system can be used to trail political opponents, monitor regime critics at any moment, which is completely against the law,” said Serbia’s former commission­er for personal data protection, Rodoljub Sabic.

Groups opposed to Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic say police are leaking video of protests to progovernm­ent media, which publish the images, along with the identities of participan­ts. Vucic himself has boasted the police have the capability to count “each head” at antigovern­ment gatherings. During a recent rally, protesters climbed up a pole and covered a camera lens with duct tape scrawled with the word “censored.”

Serbian police deny any such abuse of the Huawei system, which will eventually encompass 1,000 cameras in 800 locations throughout Belgrade. Huawei said it “complies with all applicable laws and regulation­s” in Serbia and anywhere else it does business.

While facial recognitio­n technology is being adopted in many countries, spurring debate over the balance between privacy and safety, the Huawei system has gained extra attention due to accusation­s that Chinese laws requiring companies to assist in national intelligen­ce work give authoritie­s access to its data.

As a result, some countries are reconsider­ing using Huawei technology, particular­ly the superfast 5G networks that are being rolled out later this year.

Still, Huawei, which denies accusation­s of any Chinese government control, has had no trouble finding customers eager to install its socalled Safe Cities technology, particular­ly among countries that China has brought closer into its diplomatic and economic orbit.

Besides Serbia, that list includes Turkey, Russia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Angola, Laos, Kazakhstan, Kenya and Uganda, as well as a few liberal democracie­s like Germany, France and Italy. The system is used in some 230 cities, exposing tens of millions of people to its screening.

In a promotiona­l brochure, Huawei says its video surveillan­ce technology can scan over long distances to detect “abnormal behavior” such as loitering, track the movement of cars and people, calculate crowd size and send alerts to a command center if it detects something suspicious. Local authoritie­s can then act upon the informatio­n they receive.

In one case advertised on its website, the company says a suspect in a hitandrun accident in Belgrade was later discovered in China with the help of face recognitio­n data shared by the Serbian police with their Chinese counterpar­ts.

In view of the cybersecur­ity accusation­s leveled by the U.S. and internatio­nal rights groups against Huawei, the relationsh­ip between China and countries that use the company’s technology is coming under renewed scrutiny.

China’s influence in Serbia, a European Union candidate that Beijing views as a gateway to the continent, has significan­tly expanded in recent years through Beijing’s global Belt and Road investment programs. The populist Serbian regime has been keen to develop closer ties and the country’s fragile democracy allows China’s economic interests to grow relatively unchecked, without raising too many questions about human rights, environmen­tal standards or transparen­cy.

China’s state investment bank has granted billions of dollars in easyterm loans to build coalpowere­d plants, roads, railroads and bridges. Chinese police officers even help patrol the streets of Belgrade, a security presence officially billed as assisting the growing number of Chinese tourists who visit the city.

It’s a similar story in Uganda, where China has invested heavily in infrastruc­ture like highways and a hydropower dam on the Nile.

When longtime President Yoweri Museveni launched a $126million project to install Huawei facial recognitio­n systems a year ago, he said the cameras were “eyes, ears and a nose” to fight rampant street crime in the sprawling capital, Kampala. Opposition activists say the real goal is to deter street protesters against an increasing­ly unpopular government.

“The cameras are politicall­y motivated,” said Joel Ssenyonyi, a spokesman for the musician and activist known as Bobi Wine who has emerged as a powerful challenger to Museveni. “They are not doing this for security. The focus for them is hunting down political opponents.”

In neighborin­g Kenya, the government has also renewed its focus on public safety after a spate of extremist attacks. It has been pushing to register people digitally, including by recording DNA, iris and facial data. To do so, it turned to China, which helped finance the installati­on of surveillan­ce cameras in Kenya as far back as 2012.

The Kenyan government wants to pool into one database all the informatio­n from public and private CCTV cameras, including those with facial recognitio­n technology, a move that activists warn would vastly expand its surveillan­ce powers in a country that does not have comprehens­ive data protection laws.

A growing number of countries are following China’s lead in deploying artificial intelligen­ce to track citizens, according to the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace. The group says at least 75 countries are actively using AI tools such as facial recognitio­n for surveillan­ce — and Huawei has sold its systems in 50 of those countries, giving it a far wider reach than competitor­s such as IBM and Japan’s NEC.

“It’s very unclear what safeguards are being put in place,” said Steven Feldstein, a Carnegie Endowment fellow who authored a report on the issue. “Where are images being stored? How long are they being stored for? What kind of accountabi­lity procedures will there be? What type of operations will be linked to these surveillan­ce cameras?”

Huawei said in an email that it “complies with all applicable laws and regulation­s in our countries of business. This is the most fundamenta­l principle of our business operations. We are dedicated to bringing people better connectivi­ty, eliminatin­g digital gaps, and promoting the sustainabl­e developmen­t of our societies and economies.”

In Belgrade’s bustling downtown Republic Square, hightech video cameras are pointed in all directions from an office building as pedestrian­s hurry about their everyday business.

With public authoritie­s disclosing little about how the cameras work, a rights group has set up a tent to ask pedestrian­s whether they know they are being watched.

“We don’t want to be in some kind of Big Brother society,” said rights activist Ivana Markulic. “We are asking: Where are the cameras, where are they hidden, how much did we pay for them and what’s going to happen with informatio­n collected after this surveillan­ce?”

 ?? Darko Vojinovic / Associated Press ?? A young Serbian rights group activist has her face painted to confuse the Huawei surveillan­ce video cameras, like these in Belgrade, right.
Darko Vojinovic / Associated Press A young Serbian rights group activist has her face painted to confuse the Huawei surveillan­ce video cameras, like these in Belgrade, right.
 ?? Dusan Stojanovic / Associated Press ??
Dusan Stojanovic / Associated Press

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