The Guardian Australia

Documents link Huawei to Uyghur surveillan­ce projects, report claims

- Vincent Ni China affairs correspond­ent

Huawei has helped Chinese authoritie­s create surveillan­ce technology that targets the country’s Uyghur minority population, an investigat­ion has alleged.

A series of marketing presentati­on slides reviewed by the Washington Post found Huawei had a role in developing surveillan­ce projects created in a partnershi­p with other Chinese companies.

They included analysis of voice recordings, monitoring detention centres, tracking locations of political individual­s of interest, police surveillan­ce in the western Xinjiang region, and corporate tracking of employees and customers.

While the slides did not specify who the presentati­ons were for, the report said some of them showcased surveillan­ce functions specific to police or government agencies, which suggests Chinese government authoritie­s may have been the intended audience.

Huawei said it had no knowledge of the projects mentioned in the Washington Post report. “Huawei does not develop or sell systems that target any specific group of people and we require our partners comply with all applicable laws, regulation­s and business ethics,” it said in a statement. “Privacy protection is our top priority and we require that all parts of our business comply with all applicable laws and regulation­s in the countries and regions where we operate.”

According to the report, many of the slides were created in 2014, a few months after a terrorist attack at Kunming railway station that killed 31 people – a case Chinese officials often cite when justifying their policies in Xinjiang. The report said some modificati­ons to the files were made in 2019 or 2020. Huawei’s logo can be seen in many of these slides.

The report claimed Xinjiang surveillan­ce projects were highlighte­d in several slides. Although they did not mention the Uyghur ethnic minority specifical­ly, at least one slide claimed Huawei’s technology had helped the public security bureau in Ürümqi, the capital of Xinjiang, capture a number of criminal suspects.

The presentati­on said the system had been in use in Ürümqi since 2017 – which experts believe is around the time when the mass detentions of Uyghurs began.

In recent weeks the US and several of its allies have announced a diplomatic boycott of the Beijing Winter Olympics in response to what the Biden administra­tion called “crimes against humanity in Xinjiang and other human rights abuses”.

The report said a “one person one file” facial recognitio­n solution was codevelope­d by Huawei and a Beijingbas­ed company, which was sanctioned by the US commerce department in July for alleged human rights abuses in Xinjiang.

According to the report, other presentati­ons said Huawei’s equipment was used in surveillan­ce camera systems in other Xinjiang cities, highways and detention centres.

The pitch to provide voice recording analysis aimed to help the authoritie­s examine voice recordings for national security purposes, the report said. In China, the term “national security” is broad. It could range from activities conducted by political dissents to policies in Hong Kong.

One 2018 presentati­on introduced the iFlytek Voiceprint Management Platform, a product co-developed by Huawei and iFlytek, a Chinese artificial intelligen­ce company. According to the slide, this product can identify individual­s by comparing their voice against a “voiceprint library”.

It is unclear whether the developers of this product were involved in collecting voiceprint­s. But the partner, iFlytek, was sanctioned by the US for alleged human rights violations in 2019. The company did not respond to the Washington Post’s inquiry.

 ?? Photograph: Tyrone Siu/Reuters ?? A surveillan­ce camera outside a Huawei factory in Dongguan, Guangdong province.
Photograph: Tyrone Siu/Reuters A surveillan­ce camera outside a Huawei factory in Dongguan, Guangdong province.

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