| Security camera network system moves onBy Jiang Xuezhou (China Daily)
 Updated: 2005-12-20 06:27
 
 
 A network that connects security cameras in tens of thousands of 
supermarkets, banks and schools under police control to a main complex is set to 
be completed by the end of next year, Beijing News reported yesterday.
 The new technology will help to speed up response times to emergencies, said 
Ma Zhenchuan, director of the Beijing Municipal Public Security Bureau.
 Image identification systems will be installed at places where large numbers 
of people gather, such as supermarkets and marketplaces, to help to identify 
suspicious looking packages. 
 Through the analysis of the images on a computer screen, police would also be 
able to distinguish between things such as a fighting and horseplay between 
friends, according to Liu Song, an official in charge of internal safety affairs 
under the bureau.
 He said that a possible stampede accident was avoided in October this year 
when a business promotion by a shopping centre saw huge crowds ahead of its 
official opening.
 "After studying the information provided by the internal safety network, 
police in Xicheng District instantly informed the shopping centre to start 
business earlier than planned," Liu said.
 More than 1,500 units, which also include petrol stations and kindergartens, 
in Beijing have already been adopted into the network to improve public 
security, said the report.
 For example, a series of blasts were reported in an underground supermarket 
affiliated to the Beijing New World Centre and Beijing Railway Station square on 
July 8.
 Within four hours, the police department concentrated and nabbed suspect Wei 
Haibo by studying the supervision video records in the shopping centre, police 
officials said.
 Statistics indicated that more than 12,000 suspects have been arrested so far 
this year based on images from monitor cameras installed in financial units, 
police said.
 Under the new network, it will only take the police department 10 minutes to 
check that all the 3,000 automatic teller machines (ATM) in the city are working 
correctly and not being targeted by scamsters.
 
 (China Daily 12/20/2005 page3)  
 
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