Skip to content

EU Firms Selling Surveillance Tools to Chinese Police: Report

  • World

Gabbard: Election Fraud a ‘Serious Threat’

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-Hawaii) has put forward a bipartisan bill aiming to improve the security of vote-by-mail. It proposes to incentivize states to ban ballot harvesting. Here’s the latest on the 2020 U.S. presidential election coverage.Focus News: Gabbard: Election Fraud a ‘Serious Threat’

EU Firms Selling Surveillance Tools to Chinese Police: Report

Some European tech companies have been selling digital surveillance technology to Chinese security agencies involved in serious human rights violations, Amnesty International said on Monday.

Three companies based in France, Sweden, and the Netherlands sold digital surveillance systems, such as facial recognition technology and network cameras, to key players of the Chinese communist regime’s mass surveillance apparatus, according to a new report (pdf) published by the human rights organization.

In some cases, the export was directly for use in China’s indiscriminate mass surveillance programs, the report revealed.

EU Firms Selling Surveillance Tools to Chinese Police: Report This photo taken on May 31, 2019 shows a Uighur woman (C) going through an entrance to a bazaar in Hotan, in China’s northwest Xinjiang region. (Greg Baker/AFP via Getty Images)

‘Out of Control’

“Europe’s biometric surveillance industry is out of control,” said Merel Koning, Amnesty International’s senior policy officer on technology and human rights.

“Our revelations of sales to Chinese security agencies and research institutions that support them are just the tip of the iceberg of a multi-billion Euro industry that is flourishing by selling its wares to human rights abusers, with few safeguards against end-use abuses.”

EU Firms Selling Surveillance Tools to Chinese Police: Report Security guards patrol below surveillance cameras on a corner of Tiananmen Square in Beijing on Sept. 6, 2019. (Greg Baker/AFP/Getty Images)

“These companies are profiting from of the sale of digital surveillance technologies that are linked to horrific human rights violations,” said Koning. “The companies should have known full well that sales to China’s authorities were of significant risk but apparently took no steps to prevent their products from being used and studied by human rights abusers.”

‘Serious Questions to Answer’

Sales of digital surveillance systems are not currently restricted by the European Union despite posing risks to privacy and other freedoms in countries that lack adequate safeguards, according to the report.

“These technologies can be exported freely to every buyer around the globe,” reads the report. “The EU exports regulation framework needs fixing, and it needs it fast.”

EU Firms Selling Surveillance Tools to Chinese Police: Report A man wearing a protective face mask walks under surveillance cameras as China is hit by an outbreak of the novel coronavirus, in Shanghai, on March 4, 2020. (Aly Song/Reuters)

Amnesty International called for the technology to be treated in the same way as goods with dual civilian and military use, meaning export deals could be blocked if judged to pose a significant threat to human rights.

“EU governments need to face up to their responsibilities and rein in this unchecked industry,” said Koning. “Until the EU does, they have serious questions to answer about their potential role in human rights violations perpetrated by the Chinese government.”

The European Parliament and EU member states will hold a crucial meeting in Brussels on Tuesday to decide whether to strengthen EU export rules.

EU Firms Selling Surveillance Tools to Chinese Police: Report Flags of the European Union fly outside the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, on May 11, 2016. (Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)

Allegations Denied

The Amnesty report identified three EU companies that have supplied surveillance equipment to Chinese police.

Morpho, which is now part of IDEMIA, a French multinational, was awarded a contract to supply facial recognition equipment directly to the Shanghai Public Security Bureau in 2015, the report says.

IDEMIA said the sale had involved an old-generation system for the identification of faces on recorded footage rather than live surveillance, adding it “did not and does not sell facial recognition technologies to China.”

Axis Communications, a Swedish company, was said to have supplied its technology to China’s public security apparatus and is repeatedly listed as a “recommended brand” in Chinese state surveillance tender documents dating from 2012 to 2019.

Axis issued a statement saying “we understand that our solutions, like many other technologies, can be used for purposes other than intended.” But it said “we always respect human rights and oppose discrimination and repression in any form,” and “customers are systematically screened to highlight any legal restrictions or inclusion on lists of national and international sanctions.”

Dutch company Noldus Information Technology supplied emotion recognition systems to public security and law enforcement-related institutions in China, Amnesty said.

Noldus CEO Lucas Noldus rejected the allegation. “Our software cannot be used for mass surveillance and does not pose a risk to human rights,” he said in a statement (pdf).

Reuters contributed to this report.

Focus News: EU Firms Selling Surveillance Tools to Chinese Police: Report

House Democrats Unveil Bill to Avert Government Shutdown, Lacks Farm Aid

House Democrats on Monday introduced a bill to keep the federal government funded until Dec. 11, although it’s not clear if the White House or congressional Republicans will take it up, raising the prospect of a federal shutdown by the end of September. The continuing resolution (CR) bill (pdf) extends current levels of spending past the Sept. 30 deadline until Dec. 11. However, it does not include $30 billion for farm aid that the White House sought, officials said. “We do prefer additional farm aid in the CR. Most of all we want a clean CR, keep the government open,” White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow told reporters on Monday, suggesting that the White House may still accept the bill in its current form without farm aid. It’s not clear if the…