PERRYSCOPE
Perry Diaz
Perry Diaz
Recently,
a news report said that the Philippines and state-owned China International
Telecommunications and Construction Corp. (CITCC) entered into a loan agreement
to fund the installation of a vast network of security cameras.
The P20-billion deal
would initially install the security cameras in Metro Manila and Davao.
This agreement was one
of the 29 agreements that were signed during Chinese President Xi Jinping’s
state visit last November 2018. Reportedly, an initial 12,000
closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras – also known as video surveillance --
will be installed in 30 months.
They’ll be located at
crossings, roads, public squares, business districts, science and technology
parks, residential areas and stadiums, among others. Chinese
nationals will install and maintain the CCTV cameras.
According to a CITCC
briefer, the project’s ultimate outcome is a “Safe Philippines” that would
guarantee the citizens’ good living and social economic stability for
growth. It also said, “It aims to reduce crime by at least 15
percent and improve response time by 24 percent.” ]
The system includes a
national command center with backup data center to be located in Clark,
Pampanga with facial and vehicle recognition software. It will also be linked
to disaster response agencies in all regions once the entire project is in
place.
Big Brother
This
reminds me of “Big Brother,” a fictional character in George Orwell’s novel
“Nineteen Eighty-Four.” He is ostensibly the leader of Oceania, a
totalitarian state wherein the ruling party Ingsoc wields total power "for
its own sake" over the inhabitants. In the society that Orwell described,
every citizen is under constant surveillance by the authorities, mainly by
“telescreens” (devices that operate as television, security camera, and
microphones).
It keeps its subjects
under constant surveillance, thus eliminating the chance of secret conspiracies
against Oceania. The people are constantly reminded of this by the
slogan "Big Brother is watching you": a maxim that is ubiquitously on
display. In modern culture, the term "Big Brother"
has entered the lexicon as a synonym for abuse of government power,
particularly in respect to civil liberties, often specifically related to mass
surveillance. [Source: Wikipedia]
Orwell published
the Nineteen Eighty -Four novel in 1949 as a warning against
totalitarianism. It was at a time when communism and dictators used
surveillance methods to keep the people under control. The Soviet
Union and her satellite states were in a constant state paranoia. Fearful
of conspiracies against the dictators, they used “secret police” to monitor
their citizens’ activities. In the Soviet Union, Stalin put to death
20 million people. In China, Mao Zedong’s Great Leap Forward killed
45 million in four years – from 1958 to
1962.
The earliest video
surveillance systems involved constant monitoring because there was no way to
record and store information. VCR technology became available in the
1970s, making it easier to record and erase information. Use of
video surveillance became more common then. In the 1990s, digital
multiplexing digital was developed, allowing several cameras to record at once,
which led to an increase in the use of CCTV.
Today,
CCTVs are now in use in many large cities, such as Washington DC, New York,
London, Moscow, and Beijing. There are more than 350 million CCTV
cameras worldwide of which about 65% are installed in
Asia. With facial and vehicle recognition technology, it makes
the system a very powerful method of tracking movements of people and
vehicles.
CCTV disadvantages
While
there are advantages in the use of CCTV, there are disadvantages as
well. It can be abused. CCTV can be used to monitor
political activities, anti-government activities, and “people of interest.”
And it is for this
reason that Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph Recto had raised alarm over
the contract and pushed that it be removed from the budget or at least put on
hold until it is thoroughly reviewed. “Don’t you think there is a security
threat when China telecoms and Huawei will do surveillance system in Metro
Manila?” Recto reportedly asked officials of the Department of the Interior and
Local Government (DILG) during the agency’s recent budget hearing at the
Senate.
It’s interesting to note
that the project was bidded out, with two other state-owned Chinese firms
participating: China Machinery Engineering Corp. and a consortium of Huawei
Technologies and some local firms. China Machinery Engineering Corp.
did not qualify and the consortium failed to submit documents.
Also of interest is
Huawei that is blacklisted in many countries, including the U.S. One
of Huawei’s top officials was recently arrested in Canada at the behest of the
U.S. on national security charges.
Since CITCC is state-owned,
the contract is between the Philippine and Chinese governments. This
is also true with Huawei and ZTE. Recently, Australia banned them
from providing 5G technologies. The reasons given were national
security concerns. The U.S. and U.K. intelligence communities have
both raised fears about doing business with Huawei and ZTE.
In the final analysis,
the fact that CITCC is state-owned – and state-controlled – is it fair to
presume that China’s government or the Communist Party apparatus could or would
use the CCTV to monitor the political situation in the
Philippines? Which reminds me when Xi Jinping promised to
protect Duterte from any plan to remove him from office.
In particular, China
could use the CCTV to gather information to exert political, military, and
economic pressure to protect China’s interests in the Philippines, particularly
the West Philippine Sea territorial disputes. What does it take to
link the CCTV’s in Metro Manila and Davao to the China’s intelligence
agencies?
At
the end of the day, the question that eerily lingers in most people’s mind is:
“Is Big Brother Xi watching us?”
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