Philippine Daily Inquirer

Probe of PH, China CCTV project urged

- By Leila B. Salaverria @LeilasINQ

Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph Recto has sought an inquiry into the administra­tion’s project with China to install closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras in public places connected to a central command center, raising concerns about national security.

During budget deliberati­ons, Recto had questioned the Safe Philippine­s Project with China Internatio­nal Telecommun­ication Constructi­on Corp., as the latter had tapped Huawei Technologi­es Co. Ltd. as equipment supplier.

The Safe Philippine­s Project would put in place a video surveillan­ce system linked via dedicated communicat­ions infrastruc­ture. There would be an integrated operations and command center that could take emergency calls from the public.

Anticrime

It was intended to reduce crime in the country.

In his resolution seeking the Senate probe, Recto said that even if the Philippine­s’ national security adviser had issued a certificat­e of no security issue for the project contractor, “recent developmen­ts placed considerab­le security risk in employing Chinese citizens, corporatio­ns and organizati­ons to implement government programs and projects.”

He cited reports about Chinese companies and individual­s being involved in hacking.

Huawei, in particular, has been involved in national security and data protection is- sues, Recto said.

It was accused of channeling data from computer servers in the African Union Building to servers in Shanghai, he said, citing news reports.

Proxy

A Huawei former sales director in Poland was arrested, along with an official of a European cellular service provider, for espionage, he added.

“There is mounting concern that China may be using Huawei Technologi­es Co. Ltd. as a proxy in Chinese intelligen­ce operations or as a conduit to access sensitive networks,” he said.

The Philippine­s needed to safeguard classified action plans, programs and state secrets from espionage, and to protect itself from computerge­nerated attacks that could cause massive crises in the economy and financial institutio­ns, Recto said.

“It is imperative that the Philippine government review and evaluate government programs and projects and their impact on national security and public interest,” he said.

 ?? —REUTERS ?? SUSPECT FIRM Huawei’s logo is displayed prominentl­y at the tech company’s office in Warsaw.
—REUTERS SUSPECT FIRM Huawei’s logo is displayed prominentl­y at the tech company’s office in Warsaw.

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