Hikvision Growing Xinjiang Operations

Published Nov 30, 2020 13:05 PM
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Hikvision's massive Xinjiang operations are growing, with the firm showcasing the China Communist Party Constitution and boasting how a customer told them "we support any business that is sanctioned by the US", IPVM has found.

Watch this 2-minute video for an overview:

This contradicts Hikvision's pledge to take human rights concerns "very seriously" and even have a former UN ambassador review its Xinjiang operations. One and a half years later, the ambassador's investigation remains a secret while Hikvision Xinjiang is expanding.

Early this year, Norway's Council of Ethics found Hikvision has "facilitated serious human rights abuses" that are ongoing. Hikvision was sanctioned by the US government over "human rights abuses and violations" in October 2019

Hikvision did not respond with comment to IPVM's questions but promptly deleted their video where a Xinjiang employee boasted that sanctions actually helped their sales.

Hikvision's Huge Xinjiang Workforce Grows

Xinjiang is relatively sparsely populated with about 21 million people, comparable to Sri Lanka or Bukina Faso. Yet the Hikvision Xinjiang Business Center employed "about 500" people by the end of 2019, up from "about 450" in late 2018, according to its job ads. In March 2020 Hikvision Xinjiang issued a call for 10 new software engineers:

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And currently, Hikvision Xinjiang is hiring a Software Development Engineer, Java Development Engineer, Sales Manager, Salesperson, Marketing Specialist.

For comparison, Hikvision has less than half that amount in the entire USA and 2/3rds less in Europe.

UPDATE: In an October 2020 response to a UK Parliament committee, Hikvision UK said Hikvision's Xinjiang branch "employs more than 300 people". This contradicts the latest figures from Hikvision's own job ads, which showed Hikvision Xinjiang employed "about 500" people by the end of 2019. Hikvision told IPVM "The job ads didn’t include the updated employee number”. IPVM asked Hikvision whether the Hikvision Xinjiang branch had somehow seen a substantial staff reduction from ~500 to ~300, on this, Hikvision declined to comment.

Hikvision Shows Off Massive Xinjiang Workforce

Hikvision has offices in 8 Xinjiang locations: Urumqi (its headquarters) along with branches in Kashgar, Bazhou, Aksu, Hotan, Hami, Yili, and Karamay, according to this November 2019 ad, which notes that "other [Xinjiang prefectures have also set up branches".

Hikvision touted its many Xinjiang branches in this November 2019 video celebrating its 10 year anniversary, just weeks after the US government imposed sanctions over "human rights violations and abuses" there:

Communist Party Constitution Touted

In the video, Hikvision Xinjiang employees at one unnamed branch can be seen standing in front of a Chinese Communist Party poster which details key parts of the CCP Constitution:

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The main slogan on the poster is "不忘初心-砥砺前行", a saying coined by Xi Jinping in 2017 which instructs people to "keep your mission [as a Party member] firmly in mind". The CCP Constitution instructs, among other things, to "never betray the Party" and "carry out the Party's decisions".

Hikvision is a state-controlled company whose chairman Chen Zongnian is the Communist Party Secretary of Hikvision's parent company and delegate to the National People's Congress.

Hikvision Xinjiang Employee Boasts Sanctions Actually Helped

In another Hikvision Xinjiang video found by IPVM that was released in January 2020, a Hikvision Xinjiang employee says (at 2:49) that "the most memorable thing for [him] at Hikvision" is "when a customer told me: we support any business that is sanctioned by the US":

The fact that Hikvision chose to showcase this quote shows these are not just one employee's views, but those of the company itself.

Ongoing Financing Of Huge Surveillance Projects

In Hikvision's 2020 half-year report, the firm disclosed that it is financing around $145m worth of Xinjiang police video surveillance projects until various dates ranging from 2028 to 2040:

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These are the same police projects IPVM originally identified in 2018 and which first earned the company scrutiny from US lawmakers.

Hikvision's Xinjiang "Human Rights Compliance" Report Still Under Wraps

In May 2019, when Hikvision was first threatened by the Trump administration with sanctions over its Xinjiang activities, the firm said it "takes these concerns very seriously" and had hired a former US ambassador to the UN to examine "human rights compliance":

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In light of [concerns over Xinjiang], the company has already retained human rights expert and former U.S. ambassador Pierre-Richard Prosper to advise the company regarding human rights compliance.

However, Hikvision has kept this report and its conclusions secret. The latest update is from April 2020 when it said it had "recently received the draft version of Arent Fox’ s final report and is reviewing it" while it was "in process of implementing some of the recommendations provided, such as establishing a global Advisory Committee."

Video Deleted, No Response

IPVM requested comment from Hikvision 4 days before publication. While they did not respond, after our email, the Hikvision Xinjiang video with the employee boasting about US sanctions was deleted. Similarly, Hikvision deleted their Uyghur detecting AI camera marketing and their Xinjiang paramilitary project evidence after IPVM requested comment on those topics.

Comments (7)
U
Undisclosed #1
Nov 30, 2020

John,

I'm interested in how many threats IPVM has received from Hikvision or it's surrogates? Your reporting is very damaging to their reputation (rightly so) and they tend to get very aggressive towards those who disagree with both their operations and business plan. I would be interested to know if you've received any threatening responses in the past.

NOTICE: This comment has been moved to its own discussion: How Many Threats Have IPVM Received From Hikvision Or Its Surrogates?

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Marco Sanchez
Nov 30, 2020

Has IPVM reached out to Pierre, above, for comment?

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Charles Rollet
Nov 30, 2020

We did not, but I have just emailed him and Arent Fox this article asking for an update regarding the Hikvision compliance review and/or any response to our piece. If they respond, we will update.

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Charles Rollet
Dec 14, 2020

Update: I emailed Prosper and Arent Fox two weeks ago but still no response. I have reached out to them for previous articles but they have never responded to IPVM (so far).

JP
Jack Pestaner
Dec 01, 2020

Ive been a big fan of Hikvision's products, performance, integration, and low cost for some time. This has largely caused me to overlook their activity as an active participant in the Xinjiang camps. Though not quite up to the moral questions around using research from the "medical experiments" conducted in the Nazi concentration camps, it certainly has parallels.

One of my key customers chose Honeywell's new NDAA compliant line for a major installation over Hik, so it seems the market is starting to move away from Hik.

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Brian Robertson
Dec 01, 2020

Prediction: Months from now we'll be talking about how HIK is bouncing back after a Biden administration eases sanctions and welcomes China and the US to the NWO, and embraces the China 2025 initiative. Every effort to isolate China for human rights abuses will disappear. Stand by, trunk slammers, your time is coming.

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Charles Rollet
Jan 12, 2021

UPDATE: In an October 2020 response to a UK Parliament committee, Hikvision UK said Hikvision's Xinjiang branch "employs more than 300 people". This contradicts the latest figures we found for this article, which showed Hikvision Xinjiang employed "about 500" people by the end of 2019, up from "about 450" in late 2018, according to Hikvision's own job ads. Hikvision told IPVM "The job ads didn’t include the updated employee number". IPVM asked Hikvision whether the Hikvision Xinjiang branch had somehow seen a substantial staff reduction from ~500 to ~300 - on this, Hikvision declined to comment.