CHINA> Regional
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Guangdong crimes come into focus thanks to video cameras
By Zheng Caixiong (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-09-05 09:51 GUANGZHOU: A new province-wide intelligent video surveillance system comprising 1 million cameras is putting criminals in the frame in Guangdong province.
The cameras are being installed on major highways, busy streets, railway stations, bus terminals, piers and other public places in the province. Social security will be constantly monitored in major public places in the province where the crime rate is higher than many regions in the Chinese mainland. "The new video surveillance system is expected to cast an inescapable net that will help reduce the crime rate in the prosperous province," said the police officer, who declined to be named. Guangdong has already installed more than 900,000 video cameras in Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Zhongshan, Dongguan, Chaozhou, Zhuhai and other major cities in the Pearl River Delta, which borders Hong Kong and Macao special administrative regions. And, even though the system is not fully up to speed yet, it has helped police detain more than 10,000 suspects since the beginning of the year. More than 18,000 cases of street crime have been prevented or fought, the officer added. The cameras will be part of an advanced video network that will link local police crime-reporting centers to every major public place in the region's cities. Many locals have welcomed the cameras. "The new intelligent video surveillance system will certainly help deter suspects from committing crimes in public places," said Chen Wensi, a white-collar worker in Guangzhou. "It should be good news for most of the Cantonese people." Law and order had been a problem in the province, added Chen, who had two mobile phones stolen in two months earlier this year. In another development, Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong province, has equipped all of its public buses with surveillance cameras to deter pickpockets and robbers. The cameras are fitted to the front, middle and rear of all the city's 8,000 public buses. And there has been a notable reductin in the number of pickpocket, robbery and sexual harassment cases since the video surveillance system was brought into operation in the southern metropolis this year. |