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China's minister of public security, Li Runsen, is also a director of a U.S. incorporated company, China Security and Surveillance Technology (CSST). Washington Post columnist Harold Meyerson comments that the Chinese police state provides almost unlimited investment opportunities for our hedge funds.
CSST,
according to Terence Yap, its chief financial officer, produces
security cameras and computer software that can monitor crosswalks --
to ensure that demonstrations aren't forming -- and cross-check the
faces of Internet cafe users against photos of known troublemakers.
An
authoritarian government can never be sure how many of its citizens
would relish its demise, which means the Chinese Communist Party has
1.3 billion potential targets for surveillance. Bradsher reports that
660 Chinese cities have begun installing high-tech surveillance
systems. By one estimate, high-end surveillance will expand from a $500
million industry in 2003 to a $43 billion industry by 2010.
CSST
has received $110 million in convertible loans from the Citadel Group,
a Chicago-based hedge fund, which it has used to buy up smaller Chinese
surveillance companies. Some Wall Street executives have even defended
their investments by equating the Chinese surveillance system with the
surveillance cameras of London and New York.
Our national interest or globalization. Which wins?
White
House spokesman Tony Fratto said, "It's not appropriate to interfere in
the private decisions of Americans to invest in legally incorporated
firms."
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