Global Times

Watchful eyes

China turns television­s and mobile phones in villages into surveillan­ce terminals

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By Zhang Yu

Afight was brewing in the streets of Jiantai village, Shifang, Southwest China’s Sichuan Province, the result of financial disputes between villagers. Just as a young man was about to pull a knife, the police promptly arrived, stopping what could have become a blood bath. The suspects did not know that their street fight was being watched at home and on phones by their fellow villagers, whose television sets and mobiles were connected to surveillan­ce cameras placed around the rural neighborho­od through streaming boxes and apps. A villager who had witnessed the entire incident on his TV reported it to the police simply by pressing a button on his remote control. This case, covered by Xinhua in late 2016, is an example of the capability of

China’s new mass surveillan­ce network in rural areas, which could eventually turn every television set and mobile phone in the countrysid­e into from a security the popular monitoring Chinese terminal. saying “The masses

Xueliang, or Sharp Eyes, derived its name have sharp eyes,” which depicts the power of the people. Headed by the Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission of the Communist Party of China (CPC), the project is an extension of China’s Skynet surveillan­ce network into rural areas, using artificial intelligen­ce (AI), facial recognitio­n and big data.

“Every household can become a monitor terminal, and every villager can be a monitor. This is in line with the CPC’s ‘mass line’ tradition, mobilize security,” ing people’s enthusiasm to boost rural security,' Wang Qiang, a specialist in non-war military actions at the National Defense University of the People’s Liberation Army, told the Global Times.

In full swing

For villagers who have installed streaming boxes with the Sharp Eyes system, watching live footage captured by the village’s surveillan­cecameras is just one click away on the remote control. Sichuan’s Anxi village, for example, installed 25 surveillan­ce cameras for the Sharp Eyes project and nine Skynet surveillan­ce cameras, all connected nected to the villager’s television­s. A Sichuan Daily reporter visited a resident’s home in April 2017 and could see the live footage of all 34 CCTV cameras on his TV. “I watch it in my spare time, and when suspieciou­s things happen I will notify village officials,” the resident told Sichuan Daily. Apart from television, villagers can also download apps on their smart phones to see the surveillan­ce. According to Sichuan authoritie­s, by December 2017, 14,087 villages have been connected to the Sharp Eyes project and 41,695 surveillan­ce cameras were installed. 152,855 villagers have installed apps, connecting them to surveillan­ce cameras in their neighborho­od.

After trials in some provinces, including Sichuan, since September 2015, the Sharp Eyes project was written into the “No 1 central document,” a national roadmap for rural vitalizati­on, this February, Xinhua reported. According to the document, the Sharp Eyes project should be promoted nationwide as a way to boost village safety and security.

Sharp Eyes was also mentioned as one of the key tasks for 2018 in the government work report of many provinces, including Jilin, Shandong, Hunan, Guizhou and Hainan provinces. So far, constructi­on of the project is in full swing in many areas.

Security first

Experts say safety in rural areas is the top concern for the project, as the rapid urbanizati­on process in China has left many villages unattended and unguarded.

“There used to be grass-roots civil defense organizati­ons in rural areas. But as more young males leave the countrysid­e to become migrant workers in cities, many rural areas now lack the human resources needed for public security,” Wang said.

In some remote villages, such as Xinlin county in Leshan Ebian Yi Autonomous County in Sichuan, the shortage in security personnel is so severe that five policemen have to take care of the safety of over 18,000 people, Xinhua reported.

Many rural areas are also plagued by security issues, such as mafia-style gangs, which have disturbed rural public affairs, media reports show.

“Without a modernized defense system, it is difficult to solve these problems,” he added.

Tian Feng, a system engineer with Uniview, a Hangzhou-based video surveillan­ce supplier for the Sharp Eyes project, said a surveillan­ce camera network is one solution to these problems. “Although surveillan­ce videos cannot directly solve these problems, they’re a powerful civil deterrence that can prevent people from committing crimes,” he told the Global Times.

According to Xinhua, in areas in Sichuan connected to the Sharp Eyes project, preventabl­e crimes dropped by 50 percent and the crime clearance rate was boosted 50 percent in 2016. In Shandong, the crime clearance rate increased by 21.1 percent while preventabl­e crimes dropped 18.4 percent, according to People’s Daily in 2017.

Tian said that apart from security purposes, the Sharp Eyes systems will also serve as a communicat­ion channel between villagers and the local government, allowing villagers to report community issues such as the malfunctio­ning of infrastruc­ture facilities, environmen­tal concerns and traffic issues. The system will then relay these reports to relevant department­s.

With massive amounts of footage generated on a daily basis, the project is not without challenges. Tian said that, technicall­y, the difficulty lies in safely connecting billions of gigabytes of data to one platform, and allowing this data to be accessed convenient­ly. Currently, in some provinces, the surveillan­ce data collected on the village level can already be accessed on the provincial platform, turning remote monitoring and management into reality.

Wang said the modernized infrastruc­ture of China’s rural areas is a basis for the project to be constructe­d. The project will also require the cooperatio­n of many department­s, including public security authoritie­s and telecommun­ication companies.

While some commentato­rs are worried that China’s mass surveillan­ce network will infringe on people’s privacy, Wang said privacy is not a concern as the surveillan­ce cameras are all installed in public places, along with obvious notices reminding people of entering surveillan­ce areas.

Huge demand

Tian said the Sharp Eyes project is bringing considerab­le growth and opportunit­ies to the profession­al video surveillan­ce industry. Uniview, for example, currently cooperates with local government­s in provinces including Guangdong, Xinjiang, Sichuan and Yunnan.

Lanzhou, Northwest China’s Gansu Province, for example, announced this month that it will invest 429 million yuan ($64.91 million) into the Sharp Eyes project, installing 10,000 high-definition surveillan­ce cameras and improving 2,800. Fuzhou, Jiangxi Province this month approved plans to invest 620 million yuan into the project.

According to profession­al security industry media 21csp.com.cn, with nearly 3,000 counties in China expected to be connected to the project, it will open a market worth over 10 billion yuan for the video surveillan­ce industry. With the project being extended at township and village levels, the size of the market could rise to over 100 billion yuan.

Although China boasts the biggest surveillan­ce network in the world, it still lags behind developed countries in the density of surveillan­ce cameras, especially in its second- and third- tier cities and rural areas.

As statistics released at the 2016 Beijing Internatio­nal Intelligen­t Hardware Exhibition show, in China’s second- and third-tier cities, the density of CCTV cameras is estimated at under only one per 100 people on average, while there is one per 14 people in the UK and one for every 10 citizens in the US, according to The British Security Industry Authority.

“Every household can become a monitor terminal, and every villager can be a monitor. This is in line with the CPC’s ‘mass line’ tradition, mobilizing people’s enthusiasm to boost rural security.” Wang Qiang a specialist in non-war military actions at the National Defense University of the People’s Liberation Army

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 ?? Photo: IC ?? A worker is maintainin­g a surveillan­ce camera in Shenyang, Liaoning Province. Photo: VCG Two policemen are viewing the security situation of a village in Zouping, Shandong Province through surveillan­ce cameras.
Photo: IC A worker is maintainin­g a surveillan­ce camera in Shenyang, Liaoning Province. Photo: VCG Two policemen are viewing the security situation of a village in Zouping, Shandong Province through surveillan­ce cameras.
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