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Uganda spends US$126 million on surveillance system with facial recognition from Huawei
- Police say the cameras will help cut spiralling violent crime, but opposition leaders fear the footage could be used to target demonstrators
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A forest of slender white poles topped with dark, unblinking eyes is quietly sprouting on the rubbish-strewn, potholed street corners of the Ugandan capital.
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Police say the new US$126 million closed-circuit television camera (CCTV) system, supplied by Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei Technologies, will slash spiralling violent crime.
Opposition leaders say law enforcement agencies are too corrupt and overburdened to use the footage to identify criminals. They worry police may use the cameras, which have facial recognition technology, to target demonstrators in violent clampdowns as an election approaches in 2021.
“The CCTV project is just a tool to track us, hunt us and persecute us,” said Ingrid Turinawe, a leader in the Forum for Democratic Change, Uganda’s largest opposition party.

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Facial recognition technology has become increasingly pervasive around the world, raising concerns about potential abuses. Officials in San Francisco voted in May to ban its use by city personnel.

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