A private drone company in Shenzhen exposed itself to participate in the Sino-Indian border conflict

Ltd. has recently exposed itself as cooperating with the Chinese Communist military in fighting on the Sino-Indian border. The picture shows the schematic diagram.

Recently, a private drone company in Shenzhen exposed itself as cooperating with the Chinese Communist Party‘s military in fighting on the Sino-Indian border, which aroused public concern and the company then deleted the article. Shenzhen is the center of drone development on the mainland, and the Chinese Communist Party has been developing military Drones in the name of “military-civilian integration.

(Shenzhen Kewei Tai) posted an article on its WeChat public number on February 24, revealing that the company had sent its employees to participate in the Chinese Communist Party’s reconnaissance mission in the Gallewan Valley in India.

According to the article, Zhao Bo and Shi Zhilong, two employees of Shenzhen Coventry, cooperated with the PLA’s drone reconnaissance mission at the border, as well as medical and logistical work, and said that they were “not afraid of hardship and death”.

The article was widely reposted, and some analysts believe it further confirms the news that the mainland drone civilian company handed over surveillance information to the Chinese Communist military. Shortly afterwards, the article was pulled from KeWeiTai’s WeChat public website, but it can still be seen in mainland media and on Weibo.

Shenzhen KeWeiTai is a private enterprise, and its website shows that the company “was founded in 1997, is a national high-tech enterprise, the company is committed to wireless mobile video transmission system, wireless network transmission products, computer system integration and multi-rotor UAV system research and development, production and application.” “Covetech has provided high-end advanced wireless mobile video transmission systems for the State Council Emergency Response Office, CCTV, the People’s Liberation Army, the Armed Police Force and a large number of public security and law enforcement departments and TV stations.”

Shenzhen is the center of UAV R&D and manufacturing on the mainland. The Nikkei Shimbun reported back in 2015 that Shenzhen was transforming from the former electronics city into the “capital of drones,” with more than 200 related companies at the Time.

The chairman of Shenzhen Zhihang Drone Company has said that Shenzhen has become a base for drone research and development mainly because of its concentration of smartphone industries such as huawei, the inflow of venture capital funds from Hong Kong, and the benefits of exports.

Huawei is on the U.S. sanctions list because of its Communist Party military background, its involvement in surveillance of users and theft of trade secrets.

The U.S. has repeatedly mentioned the security risks of Chinese-made drones during the Trump administration. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security issued an alert in May 2019 titled “Chinese-Made Unmanned Aircraft Systems,” alerting U.S. companies to “strong concerns about any technology products that could bring U.S. data into the territory of an authoritarian country.

On December 18, 2020, the U.S. Department of Commerce placed another private drone company in Shenzhen, Shenzhen DJI Innovation Technology Co.

In mid-January, the Epoch Times obtained secret documents from the Chinese Ministry of Defense and learned that the Chinese Communist Party is focusing on developing military long-endurance drones through “military-civilian integration.

On January 18, the Trump Administration issued an executive order requiring U.S. agencies to review and assess the security risks of drones manufactured by Chinese companies and countries considered adversaries (Russia, Iran, and North Korea), and directing agencies to outline potential steps to mitigate these risks, including, if necessary, requiring all federal agencies to cease using risky drones and to promptly remove them from federal service. .

This follows the January 2020 grounding of more than eight hundred Chinese-made drones by the U.S. Department of the Interior. Then-Interior Secretary David Bernhardt ordered the department to stop purchasing additional Chinese-made drones in October 2020.