Since the outbreak of the CCP virus, the CCP has been working to implement the so-called health code, which is believed to be using big data to monitor the population. The picture shows Chinese Communist Party public security officers are monitoring residents.
This year, in the face of the resurgence and multiple outbreaks of the New Guinea virus, the Chinese Communist Party has been unable to do anything about the Epidemic except to seal off the cities and block the truth, and it knows nothing about the source of the epidemic. But the latest epidemic prevention documents reveal that the Chinese Communist Party is using epidemic prevention as a pretext to monitor the entire population.
Guangxi document leaks that the Chinese Communist Party is using the epidemic as a pretext to monitor the public at all costs
Notice on the Management Plan for the Coordination and Investigation of Persons of Key Concern for the Epidemic in Liuzhou City
In a document issued on December 28, 2020, “Liuzhou City Epidemic Prevention and Control Key Concerned Personnel Coordination and Management Program”, the Communist Party of China’s Liuzhou City Epidemic Prevention and Control Command stated that according to the requirements of the Guangxi Autonomous Region Epidemic Prevention Command, it is necessary to “establish and improve” the mechanism of key concerned personnel coordination and management, i.e., the mechanism of monitoring the public.
The work plan lists the relevant departments involved in the “co-checking management” (or monitoring “epidemic prevention”) in the name of epidemic prevention and control, including: the Organization Department of the Municipal Party Committee, the Political and Legal Committee of the Municipal Party Committee, the Municipal Education Bureau, the Public Security Bureau, the Human Resources and Social Security Bureau, the Transportation Bureau, the Bureau of Culture, Radio, Film and Tourism, the Health and Health Commission, the Big Data Development Bureau, the Market Supervision Bureau, the Bureau of Industry and Information Technology, the Communications Management Office, the Liuzhou Border Inspection Station, the Liuzhou Customs, the Liuzhou Station of the Nanning Railway Bureau, and the Liuzhou Airport Group.
The document also disclosed the specific division of responsibilities of each unit in the epidemic prevention and control, in which the biggest difference with the previous monitoring is the addition of a “Big Data Development Bureau”, a move that highlights the core and key to the implementation of monitoring in the name of epidemic prevention and control of all people, big data.
The “Liuzhou City Epidemic Prevention and Control Management Program for Persons of Key Concern” reveals the relevant departments involved in surveillance.
For example, the Public Security Bureau, the traditional violent organ of the Communist Party, is now not only responsible for maintaining order, but also for “big data analysis of the population in each area”.
The Transportation Bureau, together with the Big Data Development Bureau and the Public Security Bureau, is responsible for tracking the trajectories of the vehicles taken by people of key interest.
Market Supervision Bureau, Customs and other units, responsible for the cold chain of Food imports into the customs, storage and transportation, production and processing, sales, food and beverage chain to carry out the whole chain of supervision.
The Communications Management Office is responsible for coordinating with the three major carriers – Telecom, Unicom and Mobile – to collect all kinds of private information of the Chinese people through their cell phones without their total knowledge.
According to the program, the Liuzhou City government uses big data to monitor people’s clothing, food, housing and transportation, and even their every move on the Internet, and then coordinates various government agencies to organize community (village) cadres, grid members, general public security, health and disease control personnel to coordinate and implement a nationwide surveillance “epidemic prevention.
Liuzhou City’s “program” late last year was similar to the epidemic prevention and monitoring of Xinfaodi carried out by Beijing authorities earlier.
A six-month-old report, “Big Data Surveillance in the Communist Party’s Fight Against Epidemics,” revealed that in the June 2020 outbreak of the Xinfa Di epidemic in Beijing, the Communist Party not only used “big data from public security” to monitor Beijing citizens, but even pushed the emergency medical system to connect with WeChat and Alipay charging functions to expand joint three-dimensional surveillance of Chinese people.
The Chinese Communist Party collects people’s personal information through cell phones
The city of Xingtai, Hebei Province, was sealed off after an outbreak this year because of its proximity to Beijing; even after full-scale testing, many parts of Xingtai have been adjusted to low risk by authorities but have not yet been unsealed. A number of frontline interviews have revealed that local people are on the verge of collapse and living in misery.
And recently, some of the epidemic prevention documents from Lincheng County in Xingtai City were obtained, revealing that the Public Security Bureau has not only worked with the Health and Welfare Commission and other departments to monitor the local population, but has even directly manipulated telecom operators to monitor people’s cell phone communications and collect location information on Chinese people.
As shown in the picture below, the first batch of data from the police integrated platform pushed by the Public Security Bureau of Lincheng County to the Health Care Commission on January 22 this year, which collected the personal information of some people roaming into Lincheng County on that day.
The first batch of police integrated platform data pushed by the Public Security Bureau of Lincheng County, Xingtai City, to the Health and Welfare Commission on January 22 this year. Photo is a screenshot of the document.
In fact, Chinese Communist authorities have long been implementing cell phone surveillance on Chinese people since last year. The image below shows some of the 5,951 pieces of data on owners of cell phones that were monitored in and out of Lincheng County through operators last year.
The Public Security Bureau of Lincheng County, Xingtai City, monitored 5,951 mobile phone owners entering and leaving Lincheng County last year. Photo is a screenshot of the file.
Circular Letter Reveals Communist Party Local Government Collaboration in Implementing Surveillance
Information notification letters from governments across China were also obtained, with documents showing that localities use various means, including big data, to monitor people and share information through notification letters or letters of concordance to jointly implement comprehensive surveillance.
On December 26, 2020, the Shandong Province Epidemic Prevention Command sent “Information Notification Letters for People Entering the Country” to the governments of Beijing, Anhui, Guangdong and Guangxi. Photo is a screenshot of the document.
On December 26 last year, Shandong Province’s Epidemic Prevention Command issued a “Letter of Information Notification for Entrant Persons” to the governments of Beijing, Anhui and Guangdong, informing them of the names of some of the persons who had completed the 14-day quarantine and asking them to pay attention and “do a good job of follow-up management,” which actually means follow-up monitoring.
On December 28, 2020, the Guangxi government of the Communist Party of China (CPC) issued the Notice on Good Follow-up and Management of People Entering Guizhou Outside the Province. The picture is a screenshot of the document.
On December 28, 2020, the Communist Party of China (CPC) Guangxi government issued the Notice on Good Tracking and Management of People Entering Guizhou Outside the Province Outside the Country, which sent information letters on people outside the province and outside the country from Zhejiang, Shandong, Sichuan, Jiangsu, and Shaanxi to the epidemic prevention command in all areas under its jurisdiction; the information letters collected a lot of private personal information.
Analysis: Which is more important, epidemic prevention or human rights
Wuhan was unblocked on April 8, and people traveling without electronic health codes were not allowed to board the train. (Web screenshot)
Up to now, the Communist Party’s major foreign propaganda efforts have been promoting the “Communist model” of “victory” against the epidemic at Home and abroad. But not long ago, Chinese people still took to the Internet to mourn the first anniversary of the death of Dr. Li Wenliang, one of the whistleblowers of the epidemic, with a message. This is perhaps the only opportunity for Chinese people to express their disagreement with the Communist Party’s “victory against the epidemic” without being arrested by the authorities.
In early February, Reporters Without Borders released a new report showing that seven journalists or commentators remain imprisoned by the CCP for exposing the truth about the epidemic, including citizen journalists Fang Bin, Chen Qiushi, and Zhang Zhan, who covered the epidemic firsthand in Wuhan.
On December 28, 2020, Zhang Zhan was sentenced to four years in prison, becoming the first known journalist to be sentenced for disclosing first-hand information about the CCP virus (New Coronavirus, COVID) outbreak. Two other journalists, Fang Bin and Chen Qiushi, who reported on the Wuhan epidemic, have not been heard from since their arrest by the Chinese Communist Party last year.
After the epidemic was exposed in Wuhan early last year, Fang Bin, a resident of Wuhan, went to various hospitals in Wuhan on February 1 to film the epidemic that had been covered up by the Chinese Communist Party, and on that day he captured a video of eight bodies being removed from Wuhan Hospital No. 5 in five minutes, causing a sensation at home and abroad.
Chen arrived in Wuhan on January 24 after the city was closed on January 23 last year, and on January 26 he filmed “a corpse that had been there for an unknown period of Time” in the emergency room of Wuhan Hospital No. 11.
On October 14 last year, the human rights organization Freedom House released its annual Internet Freedom Report, which ranked China at the bottom of the list for the sixth year in a row, saying that China’s Internet freedom has continued to deteriorate since the outbreak.
Now the Chinese Communist Party has taken the opportunity to fight the epidemic to bundle the “Health Code” with the Chinese people and infiltrate their daily lives. Without the health code, Chinese people are deprived of even the basic right to live, such as going out to buy food, taking a bus, and seeing a doctor.
According to mainland media reports, the “health code” collects user information including personal identity, name, cell phone number, ID card number and even face information. The “health code” system is shared with the Chinese Communist Party’s public security authorities.
However, the Chinese media and the Chinese Internet do not usually mention that, in addition to the “health code,” the Chinese Communist regime has also mobilized various departments, including public security, health, and transportation, to continuously strengthen the three-dimensional surveillance of the public through various means, including big data, and has put Chinese people into a large prison without walls, where “big brothers are watching you.
The Voice of America’s February report, “The ultimate goal of the CCP’s digital authoritarianism: to cultivate a self-censoring “harmonious new humanity,” featured the latest book by longtime Chinese German journalist Kai Strittmatter, “We Are Harmonized.
According to Kai, the Chinese Communist Party has made people forget how the epidemic spreads, leading public opinion to the success of its model for fighting the epidemic and promoting the idea that the epidemic highlights the superiority of the “Chinese Communist system” over democracy.
But what is the cost of the Communist Party’s strong fight against the epidemic? The answer in Ma Kai’s new book is that the epidemic has become a permanent passport to the CCP’s digital authoritarianism.
According to Ma Kai’s new book, the CCP regime has used public health as a pretext for mass surveillance and has tried to create a new kind of human being – people who are consciously self-censoring and proud of it. The new epidemic has accelerated the CCP’s “creation of a new humanity,” Ma says.
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