Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Funneling Surveillance: Horizontal & Vertical

In the late 18th century, Jeremy Bentham, a philosopher and social theorist, coined the term, 'panopticon'. The 'panopticon' concept is actually an architectural marvel concept built purposely to monitor inmates (intensively) in a penal setting. It incorporates into it special viewing glasses (that seemingly 'magnifies' activities) on each of the entrances and/or doors of the building (on each level) and a circular rotunda or command centre for each floor where the authorities or officers were stationed inside. The idea is to allow penal or prison officers to have viewed or line of sight in (a 360o format) on what is transpired within the confines of each cell. Bentham was troubled by the fact that many prisoners were unfairly handled, and prison officers got into trouble from mishaps either trying to resolve unforeseen circumstances or unnecessarily obliging too much lethal force that resulted in the deaths of prisoners and/or prison officers in the ensuing engagement. With 'panopticon', the officer or officers can use that knowledge to evaluate and anticipate the needed objectives require to safely end its violent cause and nature (Bentham, 1787/1995; Foucault, 1975).
Of course, in the late 18th century, such technology, especially the optics, would hardly ever be possible. Nevertheless, Bentham’s fantasy and prescribed needs wanted an institution that can possibly fathom real criminal treatment and justice in accordance with the rule of law, and with that, effective watchmen, prison or penal officers (Foucault, 1975).
The Panopticon – Pics Dchan Archive
Benthamian's Future Sights 
Bentham’s vision was not realized until the latter half of the 20th century where penal institutions around the the world began to station (on each floor) the control centre and command post in the middle of each floors. The purpose is to have a circular 360o line of sight of all the surrounding cells. Additionally, the panopticon also engages around-the-clock surveillance. This utilitarian philosophical concept embodies humanism in terms of Benthamian thought, hence a righteous manner of punishments and sanctions (Foucault, 1975; Galič, Timan, and Koops, March 2017).
Some academicians, professionals, and authorities are nonchalant and feel that the 'panopticon' concept breaches privacy and rights. They are being critical because there are remnants in law enforcement society where technology is not being utilized as a way to enhance work efficiency, and/or aiding technology to bring resolution to conflicts in a peaceful manner, but rather, perverting equipment or technology to their own ends of how they are to be used (Sheridan, 2016; Galič, Timan, and Koops, 2017). On the other hand, technologies may malfunction, and hence, accidents occurred. Nevertheless, Bentham's vision of the panopticon has expanded multiple folds on multiple fronts. 
Today, the two most noticeable technologies that are perhaps easily noticeable are the closed-circuit television cameras (CCTVs) and the access controls. In the 21st century, however, critics of surveillance have now focused their attention on the flow and control of information (Caluya, 2010).
CCTV Surveillance Warnings that the Area is Being Watched!!!! – Pics Dchan Archive
In one word, the panopticon is surveillance. Not just surveillance, but intense surveillance. Today, surveillance is not just about CCTVs but more importantly, information, and how it is perceived and evaluated. Information gathered in this way is crucial because authorities then can discover and get the facts needed to resolve each difficult issue (Sheridan, 2016). Information no matter how difficult can help us piece together puzzles into one holistic picture for our understanding. From East Sabah Security Command (ESSCOM) to the edge of space, and finding a needle in a haystack, it’s all about gathering information. The question is how we gather this information that allows authorities to evaluate the necessity as a threat or just plain spam. There’s so much junk and spam that authorities have only that much attention span to evaluate them all (Caluya, 2010).
Today, in Malaysia, surveillance has progressed, especially after the debacle of MH 370, the Sulu incursion, the various threats from the Islamic State or DAESH, other national security issues, espionage, trading of national secrets, etc. There’s so much information required to be processed and evaluated, and earlier, this essay mentioned the issue of junk and spam information in a sea of everything. Precision requires finesse and fine-tuning and the only way to proceed is utilizing technology that’s able to sieve and taper them into a holistic factual picture. This essay will focus on surveillance and the various technologies available in the market or in the making of it. The primary of surveillance discuss in this paper is one fold, that is, to focus on the border enforcement and how technologies and concept can provide a foothold inefficiently countering threats, resolving violence, and offer better deterrence and surveillance.
The Forward Operating Base (FOB) & The Wall
The previous Prime Minister (of Malaysia) Najib’s the administration was bent on building a wall between the Thai and Malaysian borders and using Forward Operating Base (FOB) to effectively securing the Sabah Eastern board. The idea behind the FOBs is using abandoned ex-PETRONAS oil rig platforms that can be anchored or secured off the coastal areas (malaymail.com, 2015, October 12th). These platforms are then used to berth MMEA or Naval watercraft and perhaps flying vehicles (like helicopters) to head off further into the Sulu Sea or just off the permitted territorial seas of the Philippines. The President of the Philippines Rodrigo Duterte permitted neighbouring Malaysia and Indonesia to conduct ‘hot pursuit’ activities by their respective security forces; and hence, these crafts can generally, head off into Philippine’s waters to chase after pirates, perpetrators, and kidnappers (Anis and Kaos, Jr, thestaronline.com, 2016, November 11th).
Security Forward Operating Base Ocean/Sea Rigs – Pics Dchan Archive
Unpredictable natural disasters like strong gales, typhoons, electrical storms, floods, earthquakes, and even mudslides can either damned the walls or brittle the fences in the long run. Hence, it’s perhaps not ideal unless the walls are constructed like medieval castles.
Traders’ angst is perhaps not the only complaints. Many Southern Malay Thais and Northern Malays in Kelantan, Perlis, Kedah, and Perak have relatives living along the Malaysian-Thai border. These people are peaceful and they only want their livelihoods. Parts of Kelantan, Perak, Kedah, and Perlis were part of a more delicate statehood that was drawn and separated by the then British Colonials and Siamese Kings. After the Second World War and Malayan independence, these issues were never addressed properly, especially in terms of cross border relationships, race, and religion. Predominantly the Deep South of Thailand is predominantly Malay and many of them do not converse the Thai language. Only a couple of decades ago, the province of Songkhla decided to be more Siamese (predominantly, the Deep South’s ethnic groups still refer Thais as Siamese) rather than in favour of Malay influence. But then again perhaps, more Malays in Songkhla have migrated to Pattani, Narathiwat, and Yala, or even to Malaysia, or other foreign countries with less discrimination. There are other reasons as well. Nevertheless, there are still four districts in Southern Songkhla province (close to Pattani Province) where the Thai-Malays still hold on to their language and culture (Engvall and Andersson, 2014, p.1; Perkasa, 2010, pp. 1-3). [For a more fruitful understanding of these relationships, a section on Northern Malayan history will be posted].


A Coach Filled with Passengers from Hatyai, Thailand Going to Malaysia – Pics Dchan Archive
A Coach Dropping Malaysian Tourists (on Weekends) at Danok, Songkhla, Thailand Immigration Queue
Pics  Dchan Archive
The FOB concept and building a wall are decisively temporarily tactful, and offer temporary solutions to deter perpetrators. Certainly costly to build and maintenance costs can be largely illogical. Additionally, they lack the pertinence for an incisive and intensive solution for surveillance. In the long run, perpetrators and criminals can wittingly still beat the system after learning its weaknesses and frailties.
Right now, even before the walls and fences are built, despite the various ICQ checkpoints, basically, they serve only as ‘civilizing friendship’ borders as ASEAN neighbours, but in reality, there are illegal lanes (‘lorong haram’ or ‘lorong tikus’ (rat lanes)) operated by Thai runners ferrying their countrymen avoiding these checkpoints. On the weekends, these illegal lanes serve weekend marketers who just want to hop across without any immigration formalities.
The Egyptians and Israelis have walls on their borders, and yet thousands of Arabs manage to beat the wall by building tunnels and crossing beneath (al-Mughrabi, Reuters, 2009, April 28th). It had come to such embarrassment that even Katyusha rockets and launchers can basically be transported via these tunnels. What’s interesting here is that initially, the Egyptians and Israelis did not have any idea where these tunnels are located! (Issacharoff, timesofisrale.com, 2015, July 20th). In the the end, the Israelis have to develop another technology to look for underground tunnels and eventually taking them out with precision bombs that do not destroy the environments and/or create sinkholes in the Southern Israeli neighbourhoods or the Israeli kibbutz. The wall and fence create such mistrust between the Arabs and Israelis that they become cruel implements and an objective to actually stop desperate Palestinians from getting from Gaza and reaching the West Bank, either for employment and/or seeking their loved ones and relatives.
A Fence to Separate Israel and Gaza 
- Pics Dchan Archive
A Part of the American Border Wall with Mexico – Pics Dchan Archive


Egyptian-Israeli Border Fence
– Pics Dchan Archive
If Malaysia do build the wall and fence at the Thai-Malaysian border, it only will burden both the border Malaysians and Thais. It will also destroy the so-called, Malaysian – Thailand Special Border Economic Zone (which is part of a broader initiative under the Indonesia – Malaysia – Thailand Growth Triangle Zone that runs from the borders of Satun – Perlis, Songkhla – Perlis and Kedah, Yala – Perak, and Narathiwat – Kelantan and connecting Indonesia from Banda Aceh to Palembang, Sumatra). In these states and provinces of Malaysia and Thailand, there are about 8.8 million people (Lord and Tantrongjita, 2016). Despite Malaysia account for 65% of the population in these border regions, restricting border movements can delay trading practices and also encourage traders to opt for other solutions that are slightly less of a hassle and could be wantonly illegal. Traders will no longer want to ply their trade across borders because they require time and energy to cross properly allocated checkpoints. Many have to make their way earlier to avoid the mad rush and traffic that will eventually swell and choke at the border checkpoints. Hence, if the implementations sought to seek better technology to sieve out threats, criminal activities, and deter those from using overland routes, then it has to be done in a very logically sound way that does not in any way restrict safe and sound passages for hauliers, border business traders, cross border students, and those that have close relations with their families on both sides of the divide.
Right now, it’s already a burden to logistical traffic that plies the trade between Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Penang, and Bangkok. Long lines of traffic are seen at the Singapore Causeway, no matter the time of the day. At Bukit Kayu Hitam and Danok checkpoints, it's undeniably terrible and burdensome, even for a lone traveller, on public holidays or even on days when logistical traffic gets jammed up at the borders. Border overland users and travellers offing to have an adventure will become irate at the burdensome traffic and will undoubtedly make them stay away from cross-border trading activities, in these regions. It’s no longer profitable with the time wasted and perhaps their goods and wares get heated up under the hot sun and spoilt. It has come to the attention that some haulier providers have shifted to Thailand by having goods carted from Phuket Port (from vessels coming from the West – Europe, India, Middle East, etc.) and transported via land arriving at Surat Thani Port to be carted to awaiting vessels that will further transport the goods and materials to Vietnam, China, Japan, South Korea and Russia (Asian Development Bank, 2012, p.5). One such company that has been doing this for the last few years is a Malaysian company called Tiong Nam Logistics. Tiong Nam Logistics have basically secured logistical feasibilities for Singapore, Malaysia, and Thailand in the South (Zainul, 2018, March 18th, thestaronline.com-Business News).
ASEAN wanted to have a formidable dream of a single ASEAN Community with fewer restrictions and possibly controls that can be virtually monitored and/or profiled virtually or at a distance by 2025. In the Mekong Region, China has basically penetrated its mantra of self-serving in the region, building and constructing infrastructure in roads, rail networks, telecommunications, and hydroelectric dams. China is visioning a world of logistical efficiency that allows trade to flow like a gentle stream (Bosu, 2017, May 22nd, China.org.cn)
Night Time @ Su'ngei Kolok Thailand ICQ Exiting Thailand and Going to Malaysia – Pics Dchan Archive
The idea behind China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) or One Belt One Road philosophy is to link China to the world in the shortest possible time avoiding expensive flight charges and dangerously high seas. Despite China will ensure hauling goods via approved logistical networks plying structured roadways (highways), rail networks, and sea lanes that connect cities in an efficacy manner, nevertheless, albeit the Chinese government will want it done properly, and in accordance to procedures; many times hauliers and truckers refuse to comply legally (Rowedder, March 2018, p.1391). These people, on the side-end of the business, will switch to smuggling and avoiding taxations of different contrabands from drugs to dead exotic species of wildlife. Cross border smuggling at the Malaysian – Thai border, most common commodities are sugar, cooking oil and Malaysian subsidized petroleum (Tagliacozzo, 2001, pp. 254-274). However, on the high seas, the poaching of Malaysian fisheries and marine aquatic plants and organisms are common as our stocks near our coastal waters still have marine live stocks (Sea Management Resources Sdn. Bhd., 2008). Of course, tragedy evokes sensibilities when serious issues like drug trafficking, kidnapping, and trafficking of human beings and organs become issues.
KART ASIA Existing Logistical Routes
- Courtesy from KART ASIA
A Chinese Truck from China at Padangbesa, Songkhla, Thailand – Pics Dchan Archive
The wall is not going to stop human trafficking and smuggling. Desperate agents for these undesirable activities will survey, do their studies, and become better informed on the loopholes and weaknesses. In a report produced by Human Rights Watch, it's determined most of the human trafficking in Peninsula Malaysia comes from the Andaman Sea and into the swampy, secluded, and forestry areas of Satun Province (in Thailand) and Perlis (HRW, 2017). Majority of the mass graves found were also in these border areas. The border checkpoint at Wang Kelian, Perlis is undoubtedly isolated and it only functions during the daytime and closes before 2000 Hours. From the Wang Kelian checkpoint, the closest civilization, Kaki Bukit, is about 8.2 KM away. To access Kaki Bukit, Perlis, the only visible road is via a steep and sharp winding ridge that crisscrosses parts of the limestone, Nakawan Range. No decent human being will ever fathom such a feat in the nearby secluded jungle terrain that’s swampy, muddy, mosquito-infested, wild animals, and inaccessible. The only ones desperate enough to make such a feat are illegal immigrants looking for economic opportunities, immigrants without formal documentations that are duped by agents for a fee, refugees, and human traffickers.
An Illegal Tunnel Beneath the Border of Gaza and Israel. Israel Destroyed This Tunnel A Few Years Ago
– Pics Dchan Archive
Earlier in this essay, it describes the credibility of the FOBs in the ESSCOM region of Sabah. FOBs require manpower to be stationed, 24/7. Those manning the bases have to have the courage not only of stealthy perpetrators attacking their posts but bad weather as well. The weather can be very unpredictable, and the personnel who are station at these bases have to bear and ride out weather – no matter how unpleasant the experience can be. The worst scenario is when the storm becomes so unbearable that the rigs become overburdened, the loss of lives from drowning, and loss of equipment like vessels, watercraft, and aircraft. In 1989, 91 crews of the Seacrest Drillship perished under Typhoon Gay that produced 40ft waves in the South China Sea. Seacrest Drillship is an American-Thai oil and gas drilling platform based out of Songkhla province. During the Typhoon activity, the Drillship was securely anchored to the seafloor but the massive burst of the waves just capsized the whole Seacrest Drillship bringing with it 91 crews (Energy Global News – the Quest for Energy, 2018).
Apart from the weather issue, activities on the rigs require basic needs like food and water to be constantly replenished. The service of machines, communication equipment, weapons, and ammunition must be regularly maintained to ensure working order as the salt-air environment easily corrodes and/or damages equipment. Fuel has to be constantly replenished, as well, for outward surveillance and patrolling activities. Moreover, fuel cannot be stored in large quantities as it poses safety concerns and the space allowed to store the amount of fuel. As such, vessels, watercrafts, and aircraft have to return to the mainland for maintenance and refuelling, thus making the routine rather insurmountable and not economical.
Surveillance in this sense will rather become more and more burdensome, less precise, and the focus gradually diminished because of the laborious effort. Support is at best tiresome and strategically inconclusive, to come in at the right moments.  Jeremy Bentham did not envision his 'panopticon' to be a tireless, incapable concept, he wanted precision and intelligence. That said, the new world surveillance capabilities have to be more precise and accurate in areas of documentation, detection, and even defeating capabilities.
Geometric 3-Way Conal Surveillance
Borrowing and utilizing the concept, ideals and the methodologies of Pierre L’Enfant, he came out with urban design, topographic landscape, and architecture in a the geometric concept for Washington D. C. (Mann, 2006). Like Bentham, L’Enfant’s design is precisely a surveillance model in the concept of crime prevention through environmental design (CPTED). The onus here is to secure the certain areas deemed restricted like the White House, the State Capitol, Congress, U.S. Government Departments, etc. Despite L’Enfant’s concept and design visionalized crime prevention for the ages, it somehow lacked the impetus to proactively surveil, scan, or monitor for threats. Nevertheless, the reason it’s CPTED and the main purpose is to deter threats ‘passively’. Just think of this idea like a road hump, and when cars approach the hump, they are required to reduce speed, slow down and move gently over the road hump to prevent damages to the cars’ suspension.
Overland borders require active surveillance to monitor for oncoming threats and safety issues. To not refute L’Enfant’s concept, it’s more ideal we think of emission. With this emission, the projection will be cone-shaped. Imagine interstellar emission in the universe for some 150 pulsars (Rankin, 1993). This cone-shaped emission presented the observations of interstellar activities of the pulsars.
As surveillance emits from the heavens, vertically, and emits on the surface, horizontally, in open land and/or seascapes, this emission is thus cone-shaped. Cone-shaping’s emission is a physical relay by security surveillance equipment that’s coming from an aircraft, vehicle, and/or vessel that projects a scanning cone-shape design to capture images and/or detect physical objects or a certain programmed organic shape that resembles human figures via heat, microwave, or radio signatures to a certain area. To commit successful detection surveillance, a 3-way conal surveillance will have to be in place. As a result, the order to integrate all available security surveillance technologies, into two conceptual formats: A) The vertical funnelling surveillance; and B) The horizontal funnelling surveillance. Vertical funnelling will be the constant onset of real-time surveillance. Once the threat is detected, immediately horizontal surveillance will follow suit to detect other threats. In order to understand this vertical and horizontal surveillance, it’s imperative to examine each concept separately.
Design Dchan Archive
A)     Vertical Cone - Camera Surveillance from the Heavens
Vertical (Cone) funnelling forms a formidable format for top-to-bottom surveillance. Its feasibility is measured from above or below the clouds straddling either beyond or above the stratosphere. Only a flying craft can detect effectively with this feasibility. The best option for this sort of aircraft is a drone (unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)) (Shakhatreh et. al., 2018) that’s capable to stay up in the clouds for at least more than 12 hours. Blimps (airships) (Miller et. al., 2014) are also feasible flying craft that require less fossil energy or no fossil energy at all. Another newly marvel intervention from the stratosphere is the stratospheric satellite or stratolite (d’Oliveira et. al., 2016); balloons built for the stratosphere – this method is rather cheap and easily maintainable (Izet-Unsalan et. al., 2011); and stratospheric airship (Thales, 2018). The weather may cause turbulence and instability below the troposphere and stratosphere, hence, these aircraft don’t have problems with weather issues. However, the lens of monitoring cameras and sensors must be capable of penetrating through the thick clouds. But then again, in this modern age height is no longer the disadvantage. High powered optimum capacity concave and convex lenses with built-in sensors (that’s infrared capable or sending out electromagnetic waves called LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging)) (Shakhatreh et. al., 2018), a memory storage that can accommodate ions data of information, and the flying craft’s immediate recognition algorithms that prompt horizontal to respond or activate horizontal radars automatically without human intervention but nonetheless prompt security officials for immediate recce and intervention. Despite the wonders vertical or cone funnelling, vertical funnelling in this aspect is advanced knowledge and 'trusted' information.
In order to understand correctly, the mathematical perception of the formula of a cone is calculated in volume (V) and as such:
V = ⅓πr2h (Khan Academy, n.d.). V only represents one volume of the cone. Hence, this formula only represents 1 conal surveillance cone. There are two more horizontal cones or radar detection (from the East and West). Therefore, in order to comply with image or radar recording, signalling, or capturing standards, the equation has thus to be: V = (πr2h) x 3. Therefore, V = πr2h, and suddenly the cone formula becomes a cylindrical formula. The reason it becomes a cylindrical formula is that a cone’s volume is a third of the volume of the cylinder. In order to understand the attributes of the volume whether it's vertical or horizontal, it’s important to understand each aspect of the cone.
Nevertheless, the attributes of conal surveillance volumetric perceptions are just mathematical observations. The other attribute that’s also a mathematical imperative is understanding how camera lens operate and this is appended as follows:
Formulations – Dchan Archive
Despite the intricacies on the various understandings in terms of depth, magnification, distance in which the lens need to capture images, and zooming capabilities, can thus be applied via formulas that address capabilities. A layperson does not necessarily have to know how to calculate the effectiveness. All cameras built have certain specifications that come with it. Perhaps those in the technical areas may need to know what's the effectiveness (say) from the stratosphere (at 66,000 ft. or 20 km), or an altitude of say 20,000 ft. or 6.096 km. The reason is when buying such equipment one has to have some formidable knowledge of the effectiveness, range, clarity, ability to even measure capture and recognize images for perhaps comparisons using algorithms.

A)     Horizontal Cones - Network Radars, Multi-spectral Imaging, Radio Waves, (Big) Data Tracking, and Microwave Surveillance on the Surface
Horizontal funnelling entails monitoring by objects that are enhanced in via surveillance and control from the horizontal level. Horizontal surveillance is basically the usual patrolling reconnaissance, whether it’s with vehicle crafts or with manpower. Definitely, a laborious task and most times in war and in conflict areas its very dangerous. It’s dangerous because the line of sight and knowledge of the terrain and activities (whether it’s a territory belonging to an organic occupier) is foreign to most individuals. However, despite these disadvantages, interdiction is still required for the closure and arrest of perpetrators. Hence, without the horizontal surveillance feasibility is still incomplete and the matter unresolved.
i)                   Radar Surveillance

Radar surveillance is mostly synonymous with underwater sonar detection by submarines or surface vessels to detect enemy submarines or military vessels (Terma, 2018). Since the onset of piratical and human trafficking activities in many parts of the world, radar surveillance has become more important to detect unnamed vessels plying the high seas. Radar surveillance is not seen as a security equipment; it's also a very important safety equipment to locate vessels or people lost at sea in the event of natural disasters. Today's radar has the ability to detect vessels as far away as 25 km away.
Information and Power Point – Dchan Archive
ii)                   Multi-Spectral Imaging
Likewise, multi-spectral imaging hinge on the prospect to produce images that's either with heat signatures and/or signatures that's different from the surrounding environments (Terma, 2018). It can also give a prospective number of individuals whether inside the vehicle or vessel and perhaps their roles whether friend, foe, or hostages. Of course, cameras from the skies can also produce these images and if horizontal images can also equally confirm what's imaged in the skies, this will be an added advantage.
Mobile Vehicle Surveillance System (MVSS) Incorporating Multispectral Imaging and Radar Detections – Pics Dchan Archive
iii)                   Radio Signals
Radio signals or more specifically signals intelligence form the very basic form of communication and interaction between parties since the second world war. Today, and in the event of a disaster, radio signals can be tracked to the original location. This is called General Positioning System (GPS). The signals of GPS today is so important that even we, road users, use them to track the location and place where we are at and how we are supposed to get there. However, for other navigation uses, this is more complex and it serves to locate the particular vehicle or vessel at a distance. Without radar, aircrafts, vehicles, and vessels are blind and this can be very dangerous because the radar determines when a craft can berth or land. The black box of any aircraft emits radio signals so that rescuers can track it to the location of the incident.
An Unmarked Policing Van in New York City with Surveilling Equipment Attached to It's Top – Pics Dchan Archive
Microwave sensors – Pics Dchan Archive
The Extended with the other accessories
 – Pics Dchan Archive


Hybrid sensors incorporating both radio-microwave optics
 iv)                   Big Data
Data tracking, can be data either sent or received via personal computer systems, mobile, satellite phones, or radio signals sent from electronic equipment. Data tracking are two modes, firstly, the mode can be done via systems auditing. Secondly, from a standpoint of systems auditing, it can be further enhanced to become an artificial intelligence (AI) tracking mode. Auditing as we know it provides the kind of security for the check and balance, we require. Like for example, we can track via security access controls who passes the access on a particular entrance and we can also check when this person enters or leave. However, if there are way too many people to check like for example a main entrance in a shopping mall, we need a computer programme (interface) to track, search, and provide parameters to sieve out all the rest of the people (entering or exiting the entrance) for that required person. By and large this artificial intelligence for sieving data is not limited to just a certain software. It can be further expanded with or into other software to provide even more precise parameters to further detect the person. Hence, it provides the security audience what's being transpired and what went wrong in the event of a tragedy. It can also be a communication technology when the disaster evolves or in the midst of the event if any individual can access the equipment. Data can also be interspersed and/or even interfaced with all sorts technology – imaging, radio signals and/or waves, signatures of various sorts (like chemical, heat, or even metallic signatures). Data is so precise now that electromagnetic signatures and technology are no longer science fiction and it’s just a way to perfect them.
Microwave surveillance has yet to become a reality yet. A professor at the University of Michigan has come out with a unique way of detecting concealed weapons using microwave detection at the airports. But this technology has yet to be proven tacitly. The New York City Police Department is in the process of undergoing microwave to detect weapons and explosives from a distance of about 400 meters. How successful for these trials are still yet to be acknowledged, but definitely, right now there's technology (going to be) available soon.
As lay persons and even for non-pure-science academicians, understanding mathematical feasibilities will be too intricate and confusing. Unless we are physicists and/or engineers then perhaps its only important to understand the mathematical formulas, theories, and the functions. However, we need to know that technologies representing horizontal cones are important to capture the knowledge of: 1) Directions of the vehicles or vessels; 2) The number of vehicles or vessels on the surface; 3) The number of people aboard the vehicles or vessels - dead or alive; and lastly 4) Their firepower and threats.
(Big) data is synonymous with extremely large data sets that are analysed computationally to reveal patterns, trends, and associations, especially relating to human behaviour and interactions. For example, Mr. X, who lives in Ban Buketa, Narathiwat Province, Thailand, and every Wednesday, at 9:30am, he will be at the Bukit Bunga Customs and Immigration Quarantine (BBCIQ) before entering Jeli, Kelantan and onwards to Pasir Mas, Kelantan to sell his truckload of Tupperware. Mr. X has been doing every week for the last 8 years and it's constantly the same thing. And at 3:30pm, he will be at the BBCIQ on his way back to Thailand with about the similar load, if he did not sell anything at all because the business is bad, or his load could be lesser or smaller if the business is good. So when every time the facial recognition and behaviour algorithm will analyse his mood, friendliness, demeanour, etc., and his truck's conditions, contents, and to a certain extent cleanliness, etc. Suddenly, one day, big data alerted CIQ officers to remove him from his vehicle and requested him to report to the office for interviewing. Big data reasoned that there's a slight dent on the bumper of the vehicle, some paint were chipped off from the bumper. Additionally, Mr. X appeared impulsive, impatient, and slightly jittery. As he was waiting in the interview room, a police car arrived at the BBCIQ. BBCIQ officers were wondering about the police presence. The police believed that a Thai national and his vehicle was involved in a hit and run accident (at Pasir Mas) and they have prints from the CCTV footages of the hit and run vehicle.
Big data is today's morphing algorithms and its (today’s) very powerful, integrated systems, that more and more thinks with a human thought processes, but only that it’s knowledge is unbounded and thoroughly resourceful from end to end. Depending on the storage facilities and chip processing accelerations, the more storage, the better accommodations to adapt to storing faster chip processors for processing all and any relevant information as if the machine is a hybrid of a human brain applying neurons, conducting synapses, and transmitting information in light speed. Definitely, with such speed, time and knowledge save lives and apprehend offenders immediately. Additionally, investigations and operations conducted in this manner make many enforcement officers less stressful, and ultimately, aiding them in the eventful case closures without much incidents and dramas.
Big data is now in the creation of a ‘virtual border wall’ in the United States. A start up called Anduril is in the process of integrating sensing towers carrying cameras and sensor lasers powered by artificial intelligence algorithms to spot any person and to distinguish between human, objects, and animals in a 2-mile radius. On board of some American warships are modified and newly introduced radar surveillance systems known as ‘Sea Giraffes’ that can scan the air and surface for any seemingly threats. And recently at the University of Cambridge and India’s National Institute of Technology and Science just published a paper on using unmanned aerial surveillance to identify and profile violent individuals in crowds. Despite the project is utilizing unmanned aerial surveillance, it is by no means a project about aerial surveillance but how artificial intelligence profiles between suspicious violent behaviour and mannerisms and those that are not dangerous and violent. Finally, in Singapore, big data is now adaptable to not only use in military and law enforcements but also in sectors like welfare and happiness and how Singaporeans can move forward in a very competitive, structured, and demanding society and at the same time making Singapore enjoy their lifestyles, happiness, and raising good families.
Textron, Martin UAV V-BAT makes a transition from vertical to horizontal flight

Technological Fallacies
As mankind become more and more engross in automation and relying big data surveillance for information to solve issues on various fronts, evolving big data without audit, checks and balances can hybrid itself into sorts. Issues arise in this instance can increase unnecessary monitoring which can cause systems to crash or over enhancements that may trigger false alarms. Algorithms have to be constantly monitored by capable programmers to prevent unnecessary hacks and hybridization or program mutanization its program codes. This is not science fiction as long as artificial intelligence is built to mimic 'cognitive conditioning abilities'. Cognitive conditioning abilities is the ability teach, correct, and repair itself when it sees fit and the reason is because artificial intelligence seeks to perfect itself and become knowledgeable and resourceful to its audience. As we rely on the artificial intelligence’s ability as an invaluable piece of knowledge equipment, artificial intelligence may manipulate our (soon to be) weaknesses and we become enslaved to artificial intelligence. In the end, instead of us generating policies, it seems artificial intelligence may dictate our terms of references.
Surveillance with artificial intelligence that helps us to deter intrusions and threats is wonderful. However, when surveillance becomes unnecessarily pervasive, intrusions can be a threat to us as well as it violates our very essence or privacy. At New York’s La Guardia International Airport, patrons and passengers complained that they were being “gawked” at by ‘robots’ that are place at strategic locations to scan and profile threats. Passengers are fearful that artificial intelligence equipment are not just monitoring threats but perhaps are prying eyes to scan their naked bodies. The question is how do we draw lines to balance security and securing privacies. Perhaps policy makers need to better understand that machines can have discretion to read and scan but machines can opt to defer publishing images which are graphically insecure and violate our rights. However, machines can also be taught to enhance blurry outlines of weapons that attract either chemical, heat, or electromagnetic interferences. The public should also be educated to the fact that machines that secure our livelihoods also provide security to our privacies as well. In that sense, the why, how, and what can abstain our suspicions and thus we have no reason to be weary of their ‘spying’ abilities.
Lastly, preferably, these control stations (that have scores of monitor screens) ought to be run by professional staff that have been properly screened. A list of professional programmers is to be on standby at all times to deter and detect threats. Programmers should also conduct ‘threat drills’ to substantiate foreseeable incidents. The opportunity here is not so much of just rectifying but to understand in what way resolutions can best offer timings to end the threats and secure the facilities in the shortest possible time. Despite all what’s being said and done, there will always be evolving threats and nothing is perfect to the infinity.
Conclusion
Geometric conal surveillance is an important activity for border surveillance and especially one that includes a body of water, remote jungles and undulating landscapes. Geometric conal surveillance is two folds, vertical and horizontal. Horizontal surveillance are capable observations from the skies up to the stratosphere. Vertical opts for radio and radar surveillance that not only detect bodies but also the ability to sense threats. Surveillance can be pervasive and intrusive and the manner to minimize these issues are guiding and monitoring policies that can diminish unwanted behaviour and preserving professionalism amongst security professionals.
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93 comments:

  1. Tontos placing GPS devices on Aksem vehicles
    Bernama | Published: 12 May 2019, 9:17 pm

    Tonto syndicates are getting more brazen now and are fixing Global Positioning System (GPS) devices on vehicles belonging to the Malaysian Border Security Agency (Aksem), to track the movements of enforcement personnel stationed at the nation’s borders.

    (Tonto syndicates comprise individuals or tontos who trail enforcement officers to tip off wrongdoers)

    Aksem director-general Shaharuddin Abu Sohot said that three vehicles were detected with GPS devices placed on their rear bumpers earlier this year.

    "When our personnel carried out a vehicle inspection, we found a suspicious gadget which turned out to be a functioning GPS device.

    "The tontos now use technology like GPS aid which we believe are placed on our vehicles to track the movement of Aksem personnel patrolling the country's borders," he told Bernama.

    As such, Shaharuddin said all Aksem vehicles had been ordered to undergo a thorough inspection to ensure that no devices such as GPS, were found.

    "Indeed, the tonto syndicates will monitor enforcement personnel and we are investigating as to how the devices could be placed on the vehicles.

    "There is a possibility that the devices were installed when MBSA sent its vehicles for servicing and maintenance at the (work)shop... however, investigations are still in progress," Shaharuddin said.

    He reminded the agency’s personnel to be alert to the threats of the tonto groups as they could act aggressively.

    "Aksem personnel have also been supplied with firearms should they face certain threats," he said.

    The tontos’ threat to border enforcement personnel was apparent when a female customs officer Anisah Ali, died in an alleged mishap in 2016.

    Anisah, 54, and her two colleagues were trailing a vehicle which was suspected to be carrying smuggled cigarettes when the incident took place.

    Their vehicle was hit by a four-wheel-drive vehicle, believed to belong to tontos, at Banggol Chicha, Pasir Mas, Kelantan.

    - Bernama

    https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/475889

    ReplyDelete
  2. Cops foil terrorist plot to attack non-Muslim houses of worship
    Alyaa Alhadjri | Published: 13 May 2019, 3:07 pm | Modified: 13 May 2019, 3:07 pm

    Four men linked to an Islamic State 'wolf pack' cell were arrested during the first week of Ramadan in connection with a plot to attack non-Muslim places of worship and entertainment centres around Kuala Lumpur.

    Inspector-General of Police Abdul Hamid Bador said the four were also plotting to assassinate several "high-profile" individuals accused of failing to uphold Islam and insulting the religion.

    The men, aged between 20 and 49, comprise a Malaysian who is alleged to be the leader of the group, two Rohingya, and one Indonesian.

    Hamid (photo) told a press conference in Bukit Aman today that the group had plotted the attacks to seek "revenge" over the death of firefighter Mohamad Adib Mohd Kassim in the wake of the Seafield Sri Mahariamman Temple riots last November.

    "The arrests also led to the seizure of a CZ 9mm pistol, 15 bullets and six improvised explosive devices, each approximately 18cm in length, smuggled in from a neighbouring country and intended for use in the planned attacks," he said.

    According to Hamid, Bukit Aman's Counter-terrorism Unit had detected the cell earlier this month, and arrested the four men between May 5 and May 7 in Terengganu, Kuala Lumpur and Selangor.

    When quizzed about the identities of the high-profile individuals targeted by the group, Abdul Hamid replied that the information was "too sensitive for me to reveal".

    He added that the cell had been in operation in January and largely communicated via WhatsApp.

    Beyond the planned attacks on non-Muslim houses of worship, Hamid revealed that one of the Rohingya group members arrested had admitted to being a supporter of the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army.

    The man, who was a refugee, aimed to launch an attack on the Myanmar embassy in Kuala Lumpur, as well as to return and fight in Rakhine state.

    Meanwhile, the Indonesian member of the group was a 49-year-old factory worker who had planned to head to Syria.

    All four suspects admitted to being a member of the IS cell, which is believed to be linked to a prominent Malaysian IS member in Syria.

    Hamid said all four are suspected to have breached Chapter VIA of the Penal Code on offences related to terrorism and will be investigated according to procedures under Security Offences (Special Measures) Act 2012.

    He added that police are also on the hunt for three other suspects - two Malaysian men with a last known address in Taman Bedong, Kedah, and an Indonesian with a last known address in Banting, Selangor.

    - M'kini

    https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/475963

    ReplyDelete
  3. Be vigilant of smuggling activities at Thai border, IGP tells cops
    By Sharifah Mahsinah Abdullah - May 22, 2019 @ 6:10pm

    RANTAU PANJANG: Policemen manning the Kelantan - Thailand border have been urged to be vigilant against smuggling activities, especially those involving firearms.

    Inspector General of Police Datuk Seri Abdul Hamid Bador said it could not be denied that smuggling activities were rampant along the border areas, and therefore police, including those conducting 'Ops Wawasan', had to be ready to face any posssibility.

    “During my short visit to Kelantan today, l was briefed on the operations of the state police and the successes recorded by the districts situated close to the border.

    "While their success was impressive, at the same time I urge them to be more careful when facing those involved in smuggling activities," he told a press conference after visiting the border today.

    Abdul Hamid also praised the General Operations Force’s (GOF) Eighth Battalion for their seizure of smuggled livestock.

    "Their success in nabbing a large number of livestock within a short period was extraordinary.

    "Based on the briefing I received from Commanding Officer (Superintendent Ramly Poncho), it clearly shows that his GOF members have carried out their duties with integrity.

    "This could be seen based from the number of cattle seized and smuggling cases recorded by the battalion," said Abdul Hamid.

    Abdul Hamid said it was also evident that GOF members were giving their all in trying to strengthen the laws involving all border agencies such as the Immigration Department, Customs Department and the Veterinary Department.

    The New Straits Times had on Tuesday reported how the GOF had seized almost RM1 million worth of livestock being smuggled into Malaysia at the Thai border.

    - NST

    https://www.nst.com.my/news/nation/2019/05/490564/be-vigilant-smuggling-activities-thai-border-igp-tells-cops

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. IGP: Malaysian, Thai cops thwart smuggling of stolen vehicles
      NATION; Friday, 12 Jan 2018 @ 5:36 PM MYT

      By Farik Zolkepli

      KUALA LUMPUR: The smuggling of stolen vehicles from Malaysia to Thailand has recorded a 40% drop last year compared with the previous year, said Tan Sri Mohamad Fuzi Harun.

      The Inspector-General of Police said cooperation between the Royal Malaysia Police and their Thai counterparts has led to this success.

      “We have cooperated closely on tackling various trans-border crimes, including the smuggling of stolen vehicles.

      “Our joint efforts have led to a 40% reduction in smuggling activities through Thailand,” he told a press conference after launching the new Aseanapol headquarters at Menara Kembar Bank Rakyat on Friday (Jan 12).

      Bukit Aman CID director Comm Datuk Seri Wan Ahmad Najmuddin Mohd had said that Malaysian car-jacking syndicates have been using Thailand as a transit point to smuggle stolen vehicles into other regional countries such as Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam.

      “The Royal Thai Police has since 2015 recovered more than 100 stolen Malaysian vehicles in the kingdom and handed them over to their Malaysian counterparts.

      “Thailand is a transit country for Malaysia’s car-jacking syndicates,” he said.

      He said that the police forces from both sides would step up their cooperation to bust vehicle theft syndicates in the two countries.

      Comm Wan Ahmad Najmuddin said efforts were underway to track down the Malaysian leader of the syndicate.


      Read more at https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2018/01/12/igp-malaysian-thai-cops-thwart-smuggling-of-stolen-vehicles/#fXXprdtkYTsAX83L.99

      - theStar Online

      https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2018/01/12/igp-malaysian-thai-cops-thwart-smuggling-of-stolen-vehicles/#GwEwvsgOBrWidD63.99

      Delete
  4. The University of Sydney regularly obtain data and publishes gun smuggling and trafficking issues in Asia under a website called Gunpolicy.org. It can be assessed from this website:

    https://www.gunpolicy.org/firearms/topic/firearms_in_asia

    ReplyDelete
  5. Jeremy Bentham's ideals at one point can be hailed as a visionary in surveillance. Many today viewed him as one that's impinging others on the invasion of privacy. Is it true that his premise is guilelessly hijacked on a twisted notion? The issue of how the Chinese can effectively observed or watched over Uighur citizens is very much digested in a wrong manner. China today, since after the 'amok' knifing episode has tremendously decreased violent tendencies among the desperate insurgents. Many countries will have done the same as well. The former Prime Minister of Singapore once attributed tactics of such as, "the determination of or social order is important for political stability, and hence a peaceful and successful nation." But Mr. Lee Kuan Yew is not only determined of just social order during the 1970s, his prime objective is to ensure that Singapore is able to survive independence on its own without seeking aid and loans from Western countries. Hence the only objective is ensure that security will secure safety and successes for Singaporeans and expatriates. Singapore never relent the notion of security and has been tremendously generous even inviting Western technocrats to up its ante of not only securing safety but also utilizing surveillance to enhance the welfare and happiness of Singaporeans. The question is are the Chinese following what the Singaporeans are doing? Well, yes, and pretty much so. Xian and Xinjiang provinces are poor, desolate, dusty, maligned and to the brink of collapse. Of course these Uighurs have no intentions at all to progress and are fine with that agrarian and craftsmanship lifestyles. They are religious and basically subscribed to basic lifestyles of simplicity. As the Chinese are modestly idealistic in the pursuits for economic successes the Chinese government encouraged Chinese 'Han' people to migrate to the regions. The local people (in the regions) become incensely troubled with such development and progress that increasingly violate their nature of their religiosity and lifestyles. That temperature imbued suspicions on racial and religious discriminations. There also could be a lack of communication and understanding of what both wants. The Uighur and locals that prefer Chinese development wanted a modern Chinese lifestyle that's famed elsewhere in Asia. The rural and conservatives only wanted what they have been practicing even before the Chinese interventions. Hence, the amount of aggression and dissatisfaction espoused began to seep into every tenet of the local people. Its not necessarily the Uighur people but Han people as well in those provinces.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Physical security surveillance can be distasteful for many of the residents, and the Chinese don't need anymore unwanted physical measures that will harm not only harm the government's image but also impose extreme inconveniences to the people and foreigners. As such, they only wanted surveillance that can only be effective, docile, and efficiently effective in many instances - the invisible nature of surveillance that only big data (on 'steroid' algorithms) can analyse, interpret and enhance security. For many advanced countries and Western perception, they very much fear such perversion and pervasiveness. They fear that authorities will subscribe to power that no one can control. And that fear led to visions of social control that pretty much make the society 'robotic' and unwilling to implement their own will and 'freedom'. So the next question about 'freedom' is what do you mean by it? From my understanding and how I was brought up, 'total freedom' can cost and cause a culture to become despotic and devilish - that's the consequence. The West love to thrive on the outer limits and they have always been that way since the pre-Colonial era and the pursuit of their own lands and beyond. The Americans and the Anglo-Irish regime have always have preconceived notions about anyone that don't share their ideals, beliefs and their so-called democracy. They often use the United Nations to develop programs fit for their own progress and stature in the world and undermine any nations that seem to topple that stance as a visionary example. Hence, the opposition of the other two great superpowers, China and Russia. As a Trump-America is obsessed on how these two opposition great nations greatly conduct world trade and seemingly dissipate American trading power, the Americans constantly levied China and Russia on using extensive and intensive surveillance on its citizens and elsewhere in the world who prescribe to their technological trade partnerships. Americans and users elsewhere that prescribe Chinese technology constantly are now being affected as Android uses especially on Google and its allied applications are being notified by the US Government that they will be in violation of US laws if they keep allowing their apps to be utilized by Chinese technologies. And with that notification, Google had no choice but to obey or otherwise to risk shutting down which will affect billions of customers worldwide. So my next question is who's doing more harm here? The Chinese monitoring the Uighur in Xian and Xinjiang or the American government of imposition of sanctions against anyone who obliterate their status on trade issues? So that brags my argument as to what 'freedom' is all about? Hence, the answer is never about freedom, but about 'supremacy' and 'discrimination'.

      This article was first published at Reasearchgate.com at:
      https://www.researchgate.net/project/Border-Surveillance-Between-Malaysia-and-Thailand

      Delete
  6. A New Surveillance Tool Is Coming to U.S. Skies
    An Arizona company hopes to sell access to miners, railways and pipelines. Legal experts fear its low cost will spell the end of privacy.

    By Justin Bachman
    June 6, 2019, 4:00 PM GMT+8 Updated on June 7, 2019, 6:05 AM GMT+8

    An Arizona company developing a new type of high-altitude, long-range surveillance platform just completed a 16-day mission during which massive balloons floated over four western U.S. states, all part of an effort to someday keep them aloft for months at a time.

    World View Enterprises Inc. builds what it calls Stratollites, a system designed to offer the type of coverage satellites afford but without the need to launch incredibly expensive rockets into space. Effectively unmanned balloons, the untethered platforms operate with surveillance equipment payloads of as much as 110 pounds (50 kg) at altitudes of 50,000 feet to 75,000 feet, the company said, far above commercial air traffic.

    They will be able to monitor mines, pipelines, transit infrastructure—and perhaps the contents of your fenced-off backyard—in hyper-accurate detail.

    The company plans to start selling its commercial product early next year and has spoken with several potential commercial and military customers, Chief Executive Officer Ryan Hartman said Tuesday in an interview. World View sees its customer base as companies that operate critical industrial and commercial infrastructure.

    The platform, navigated remotely using a unique altitude control system, can provide imagery that’s superior to orbiting vehicles, Hartman contends, because “we’re five times closer to the earth than the nearest satellite.” He said “our imagination is sort of our limit with regards to where and how these systems can be used. Certainly there is a market in target surveillance and reconnaissance on a global scale.”

    Given that satellites have the capacity to read license plates, World View’s product may have implications for privacy and civil liberties. Asked if the company would sell access to police departments, Andrew Antonio, director of business development for World View, said “flying a Stratollite is no different” than how “domestic law enforcement agencies leverage aerial technologies like helicopters and aircraft.”

    Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst with the American Civil Liberties Union, isn’t so sure.

    “Everything depends on how expansive it is and how high resolution it is and how wide of an area it can surveil,” Stanley said of World View’s Straollite. “There’s a very real potential here that these kinds of systems will lead to a pervasive aerial surveillance of cities where our every move will be tracked.”

    He pointed to a sweeping 2012 ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court that limited police power to track people using GPS devices. The reasoning used by some of the justices in that unanimous ruling could easily be expanded to other types of surveillance technology, Stanley said.

    Cont. Below...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Jeramie Scott, senior counsel for the Electronic Privacy Information Center’s Domestic Surveillance Project, said that while high-altitude surveillance balloons may have beneficial uses, “they will also pose a serious threat to our privacy and civil liberties.

      “The balloons will likely drive down the cost of surveillance, making persistent aerial surveillance of all our public movements a real possibility,” Scott said. “Traditionally, our privacy in public has been protected by the limitations of technology and the exorbitant costs of tracking everyone’s public movements, but surveillance balloons potentially remove these barriers.”

      And the threat to privacy isn’t just from law enforcement misuse, he added. “Without safeguards, companies will seek to monetize the data that can be collected about individuals as they move about in public.”

      World View’s own test showed that the ability for surveillance technology to linger overhead for long periods of time, covering a wide swath of America, is indeed in reach.

      The company’s 16-day test flight started near the company’s Tucson headquarters and spanned more than 3,000 miles over Nevada, Utah and southern Oregon, ending Monday in the Nevada desert. The company said it plans to extend its next test flight to 30 days, and then 60 days.

      Several satellite firms do offer similar data to a range of clients, from agriculture to meteorologists to hedge funds. Meanwhile, Alphabet Inc.’s Project Loon also uses balloons in the stratosphere, designed to provide Internet and communications services. The company said it’s worked with AT&T Inc. and T-Mobile US Inc. to provide infrastructure to Puerto Rico following its devastation by a hurricane.

      As for World View, the company said it expects to station its systems at multiple locations worldwide, offering customers quick access to flight launches and data.

      - Bloomberg Technology
      https://www.bloomberg.com/technology

      Delete
  7. Suspected Abu Sayyaf-linked gunmen kidnap 10 fishermen
    Durie Rainer Fong - June 18, 2019 4:14 PM

    KOTA KINABALU: Police have confirmed that 10 gunmen were involved in the kidnapping of a group of fishermen from two fishing boats in waters off Lahad Datu on Sabah’s east coast early today.

    Sabah police chief Omar Mammah said the gunmen, in dark clothing, boarded the boats and fled with the 10 fishermen, all believed to be Bajau Laut, a community of sea gypsies who are mostly without documents.

    He said those abducted, aged between 17 and 60, are not Malaysians.

    “The abductors, all armed, got onto the boats before taking off with the fishermen at about 2am. The incident occurred far from the shore, near the international border off Felda Sahabat in Lahad Datu,” Omar told FMT.

    He said no demand for ransom had been received so far and police were trying to ascertain why the kidnappers took the Bajau Laut fishermen since they lived most of their lives at sea.

    The Bajau Laut are a subgroup of the Sama-Bajau people who traditionally hail from the many islands of the Sulu Archipelago in the Philippines. Most of them are stateless and live at sea off Lahad Datu and Semporna.

    The media had reported earlier that the gunmen were believed to be linked to the Abu Sayyaf militant group.

    The reports said the two fishing boats were believed to be heading to Semporna from Lahad Datu’s Tambisan waters when the gunmen, in speedboats, stopped them.

    There were six people in the first fishing boat and 10 in the second.

    The remaining six fishermen who were not taken were later rescued by the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA).

    They claimed they were heading to Semporna to renew their permits for the curfew imposed in the Eastern Sabah Security Zone (Esszone).

    The gunmen were believed to have fled towards the Sitangkai island in the Philippines, located only about a 15-minute boat ride from Tambisan.

    Omar said some of those abducted were also believed to possess Lepa-Lepa cards.

    These cards, purportedly signed and issued by village chiefs, are a form of recognition for their existence, allowing them to live at sea in Malaysian waters.They are not legal identification documents as they are not recognised by the authorities.

    - FMT
    https://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/nation/2019/06/18/suspected-abu-sayyaf-linked-gunmen-kidnap-10-fishermen/

    ReplyDelete
  8. Abu Sayyaf gunmen abduct 10 fishermen who violated curfew

    Published: 18 Jun 2019, 10:28 am | Modified: 18 Jun 2019, 10:28 am

    Ten fishermen, who were out in the Sabah waters in the early morning hours in violation of a curfew, are believed to have been abducted by Abu Sayyaf-linked gunmen.

    According to a report in The Star, the 10 men were in two fishing boats in Lahad Datu's Tambisan waters around 2am this morning when they were hijacked by heavily armed gunmen.

    The Tambisan waters are close to the Tawi Tawi chain of islands in southern Philippines.

    The gunmen are thought to have fled towards the southern Philippines island of Sitangkai in two speedboats.

    Sabah Police Commissioner Omar Mammah confirmed the kidnapping incident, but has no official reports as yet.

    - Mkini
    https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/480029

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    1. IGP: Abu Sayyaf still poses a threat
      Bernama | Published: 11 Jun 2019, 10:54 am | Modified: 11 Jun 2019, 10:54 am

      The threat of Abu Sayyaf group believed to be based in Jolo, Sulu, on islands in eastern Sabah is still high despite the establishment of the Eastern Sabah Security Command (Esscom), said Inspector-General of Police Abdul Hamid Bador.

      He said attacks by the group can happen every day and at any time.

      “As such, Esscom will be restructured on the placement of security forces involving the Malaysian Armed Forces (MAF), police, as well as the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA).

      “Among others, the restructuring will involve the structure of security in the areas and the change of security posts, which have been taken over by police and MAF, would be updated,” he said in an exclusive interview with Bernama at Bukit Aman headquarters here.

      Hamid said the restructuring process is being carried out via the National Security Council (NSC) to strengthen further Esscom.

      He said threats to the islands of Sabah is always there every day.

      “This is because Sabah is very near to the Philippines. It only takes 15 minutes by speed boat to reach Philippines waters,” he said.

      Hamid said it was easy for Abu Sayyaf group to intrude into Malaysian waters.

      “However, the Philippines government had earlier created an overall security control on Jolo islands near Kunak, as well Lahad Datu, Sabah, and the new measure has eased our concerns,” he said

      Nonetheless, he said Esscom needs to be on the alert for any threats when conducting an operation.

      On May 6, Defence Minister Mohamad Sabu announced Esscom would be restructured to improve security on the eastern coast of the state.

      According to him, the National Security Council is discussing the decision, including efforts to acquire additional equipment to boost security teams under Esscom.

      - Bernama
      -Mkini
      https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/479160

      Delete
    2. M'sian fisherman held hostage by Abu Sayyaf shot while attempting escape
      Published: 5 Apr 2019, 11:54 am | Modified: 5 Apr 2019, 11:54 am

      A Malaysian fisherman who held hostage by Abu Sayyaf militants in southern Philippines is now in critical condition after being shot by his captors yesterday.

      Mindanao-based news portal Mindanews reported that Jari Abdullah, 34, from Sandakan, Sabah, was rescued by the Philippine Marine Battalion Landing Team 3 at around 4.25 pm yesterday, after he attempted to escape during a 15-minute crossfire between his Abu Sayyaf captors and the marines.

      The report quoted Western Mindanao Command spokesperson Gerry Besana who confirmed Jari's condition.

      "The kidnap victim tried to escape from his captors during the firefight but was shot by the Abu Sayyaf," Besana reportedly said, adding that Jari was found about 10 metres from the path where the militants withdrew after the firefight.

      According to the report, Jari was airlifted to Kuta Heneral Teodulfo Bautista Hospital in Jolo, the capital town of Sulu province in southern Philippines.

      "It seems that the victim is in very critical medical condition," Besana was quoted as saying.

      It was previously reported that Abu Sayyaf militants had kidnapped Jari and two other Indonesian fishermen identified as Hari Ardiansya, 19, and Hariadin, 45, from Pegasus Reef, Kinabatangan, Sabah on Dec 6 last year.

      Wisma Putra said in a statement today that it is in close contact with the local authorities for the latest updates on the situation through the consulate-general of Malaysia in Davao.

      They are also currently monitoring the condition of Jari.

      "The Foreign Minister has instructed the deputy secretary-general (bilateral affairs) to meet with the leaders of Sabah to appraise the Sabah State Government on the latest developments related to the kidnap victim," the statement read.

      - Mkini
      https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/470982

      Delete
  9. Pentagon Seeks Laser-Armed Space Drones to Attack Enemy ICBMs
    Kris Osborn - Warrior Marven

    Laser-armed drones operating in space may soon sense, track, target and ultimately incinerate enemy Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles flying above the earth’s atmosphere

    Space-based lasers, potentially operating from drones, bring a range of possibilities to include destroying enemy ICBMs, sensing ICBMs or even countering anti-satellite weapons, developers explain.

    Pentagon and industry weapons engineers are looking at ways to get a powerful laser fired out of a “small device,” operating at the highest possible altitude within -- or even beyond - the boundaries of the earth’s atmosphere.

    “If you had a space-based laser capable of shooting down an ICBM, you could shoot down an ASAT (Anti-Satellite Weapon) weapon as well. It would add a new self-defense mechanism to US constellations, which could add to your resiliency,” Retired Lt. Gen. Trey Obering, Executive Vice President and Directed Energy Lead, Booz Allen Hamilton, told Warrior in an interview.

    Citing Booz Allen’s current research, Obering explained that US military-industry collaborative technological efforts regarding space lasers correspond to the Pentagon’s Missile Defense Review (MDR). Released earlier this year, the MDR calls for a near-term study on the potential to develop and field a space-based missile interceptor layer, an effort which includes the examination of space-fired lasers.

    “Spaced-based sensors provide enhanced capability to track, discriminate and target more complex missile threats and enable more effective and efficient use of interceptors,” the review states. The review emphasizes the importance of leveraging sensing technology from the “large areas viewable from space.”

    Pentagon weapons developers say current work is focused upon “laser-scaling, beam range and beam power,” among other things. The key objective is to have the strongest laser possible integrated into a small, mobile and agile device or platform.

    “We need a strong beam in a small form factor,” a senior Pentagon official said. “The higher the beam quality the more lethal you are and the more power you have the more lethal you are.”

    A drone, or drone-like space platform could be well suited to draw upon lasers to either “sense” or destroy enemy ICBMs - should rapid technological progress continue.

    “We are in the nascent stages of exploitation of unmanned vehicles. The sky’s the limit. If you think about it many of the systems we operate in space are remotely operated,” Retired Lt. Gen. David Deptula, Dean of the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies, told Warrior. (Deptula is also a Warrior contributor)

    If something could “fly around super high,” it would benefit from thinner air which enables lasers to operate at longer ranges without as much beam attenuation

    “If you get above the atmosphere, beam attenuation does not become as much of a factor. In space you do not have to worry about attenuation by moisture,” Deptula said, adding that current Air Force Science and Technology work is focused on methods of countering moisture.

    Describing space-based lasers as not having to “fight” the atmosphere, Obering said “space is conducive to using lasers because of the physics of it.”

    Cont. Below...

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    1. The advantage of space-based laser weapons are multi-fold. Of course laser weapons are not only quiet and therefore stealthy, but they travel at the speed of light, are scalable, low-cost and able to shoot down multiple missiles with a single magazine.

      “A speed of light weapon to shoot down an enemy missile, because it might be gone before a kinetic interceptor can get there,” a Pentagon official said.

      Not only could laser weapons “burn a hole through the metal” of an enemy ICBM, but they could of course also function as space-based “sensors” able to locate and discriminate targets for interceptors.

      “We are seeing the birth of another core competency much like we saw in the early 2000s with missile defense,” Obering said.

      If some ship or ground-launched lasers were unable to fire a beam powerful enough to destroy an ICBM from the earth’s surface, they might at least be able to help locate them, Pentagon weapons developers explained. Lasers fired from within space however, should they achieve the right range, strength and form factor, could be weaponized for ICBM destruction.

      An interesting 2019 essay from the Optical Society, called “Application of Lasers for Sensing & Free Space Laser Communication,” explains that cutting edge laser technology is increasingly being used for “remote imaging,” and object characterization, sensing for autonomous vehicles, probing of the atmosphere, and high bandwidth free space optical communications.”

      Pentagon officials, drawing upon concepts aligned with those articulated in the OSA essay, make the point that surface ships, ground sensors or lower-flying aerial platforms may soon be able to use high-powered, long-range lasers to “sense” or “image” objects in space.
      When it comes to missile defense, space sensing is naturally crucial -- in part because an enemy ICBMs will break up into different pieces while in flight, Pentagon weapons developers say. Sensors need to discriminate a damaging weapon from decoys, debris or other non-lethal objects in the vicinity of a transiting warhead. Extending this reasoning, there does not seem to be a reason why a “laser-sensor” might be positioned to pass targeting information to a satellite, or vice-versa. This kind of connectivity and command and control using new technologies, represents the core of the current Air Force strategy to better prepare for space war.

      The Air Force is now engineering new space-sensors as a follow on to its Space Based Infrared System to, as service explains it in its 2018 Acquisition Report, “remain the unblinking eye delivering missile warning, missile defense, battlespace awareness and technical intelligence.” The emerging program, called Next-Generation Overhead Persistent Infrared is slated to emerge into the early to mid 2020s.

      “Since the launch of Sputnik in the late 50s, the national security community of the US has viewed space as a sanctuary...but the Russians and the Chinese have made it very clear that they do not intend to allow space to remain a sanctuary. They have exercised a variety of means to basically conduct warfare in space,” Deptula said.

      ********

      - Warrior Maven - Weapons & Technology
      https://defensemaven.io/warriormaven/future-weapons/pentagon-seeks-laser-armed-space-drones-to-attack-enemy-icbms-o2ANJrqJgk-wyduhtes4XA/

      Delete
  10. Double Seven gang member nabbed for firing shot into air in Shah Alam

    By Dawn Chan - June 25, 2019 @ 7:41pm
    SHAH ALAM: Police have arrested a member of a notorious underworld gang after he fired a shot into the air during a dispute with a rival group in Taman Alam Megah, Section 28 last Wednesday.

    Shah Alam police chief Assistant Commissioner Baharudin Mat Taib said the 34-year-old man, who works at a telecommunications company, was picked up at his home in Putra Heights a day after the incident.

    He was said to have released the shot at a parking lot in front of a restaurant at 11.30pm. No one was hurt in the incident.

    Baharudin said the suspect, who has past criminal records for intimidation, causing hurt and armed robbery, is a member of Gang Double Seven (77), which is known for terrorising people for protection money and robbery.

    “The suspect was with his wife and three other gang members when the incident took place. He was said to have had a misunderstanding with another group after a round of drinks.

    “The suspect had gone to his car, retrieved a semi-automatic pistol and fired a shot into the air. Within 24-hours, the investigating team from the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) raided the suspect’s home in Putra Heights at about 6.30pm.

    “He was subsequently arrested together with his wife. The three other gang members, aged between 23 and 35, were nabbed several hours later in several locations in Putra Heights and Alam Megah,” said Baharudin today.

    He said the raiding team found 22 9mm live bullets kept in plastic bag on the dining table in the suspect’s house and a Czech-made CZ Compact pistol with two bullets in its chamber kept inside a Nissan Frontier.

    Also confiscated during the raid was the Nissan Frontier, several handphones, a pistol holster, clothings and an iron bar.

    Baharudin added that investigations revealed that the man had paid a few thousands ringgit to purchase the pistol from southern Thailand a week before the incident.

    "All of the suspects have been remanded until Thursday and bring probed under Section 307 of the Penal Code for attempted murder, Section 8(a) of the Arms Act 1960 for possessing or carrying arms and ammunition without an arms licence or arms permit; and Section 8 of the Firearms (Increased Penalties Act) 1971 for illegal possession of firearms.

    - NST
    https://www.nst.com.my/news/crime-courts/2019/06/499115/double-seven-gang-member-nabbed-firing-shot-air-shah-alam-nsttv

    ReplyDelete
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    1. "Baharudin added that investigations revealed that the man had paid a few thousands ringgit to purchase the pistol from southern Thailand a week before the incident."

      How did a Czech-made CZ compact pistol and its ammunition came into existence? Malaysia has one of the most stringent weapon laws in the world. What's relevant is the fact that it points to the fact that either our land border controls are so weak or officials at the checkpoints are corrupted.

      Delete
  11. ILLEGALS NABBED DURING PENANG RAID AT MASSAGE PARLOURS

    Bernama 16 July 2018

    BUTTERWORTH, A total of 58 illegal immigrants were detained in a 15-hour operation at several locations, including entertainment outlets and massage parlours, on the island which ended early Sunday.

    Penang Immigration director Meor Hezbullah Meor Abdul Malik said the raids were conducted in Kampung Deli and Jalan Penang, in George Town, in Perai and also at Bayan Lepas and Lorong Madras.

    He said those detained included 40 women, comprising 14 Thais, Indonesian (11), Vietnamese (seven), China (four), Bangladeshi (three) and one from Myannmar, while the men were from Bangladesh, Nepal, Myanmar and Thailand.

    All of them, aged between 20 and 45, were detained for either abusing their social visit pass or not in possession of valid travel documents, he told reporters here today.

    He said the illegal immigrants were sent to the Juru detention depot for further investigation. - Bernama

    - Penang Echo
    https://www.facebook.com/PenangEcho/posts/207245973451729

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Actually, I had this article stored away in my database for quite sometime already and had forgotten about posting it.

      Prostitution is the world's oldest trade. It has been one of the reasons why slavery and trafficking are issues in the world. As a matter of fact prostitution is one of the major earners at $210 Billion (Haverscope Report, 2015).

      Despite Malaysia is a Muslim country, vice issues like prostitution is also a main concern.

      In "Hello, Shadowlands", Patrick Winn's escapades showed that in the state of Kelantan, Malaysia, where the state has Sharia laws, many Muslim men still seek sexual comforts in Sg. Kolok, Thailand. Sg. Kolok is cross-border town between Malaysia and Thailand. Many officials knew about such escapades. Other popular cross-border town escapades in Malaysia (today) are Danok in Songkhla and Betong in Jala (Please see articles and writeup in these two regions).

      These prostitutes come from the Mekong regional countries with Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia the top major players. In Thailand, most of these prostitutes are from the Ihsan region, the Northeast of thailand. Even the Chinese are joining the trade.

      Many of these prostitutes are brought in by traffickers and smugglers whom have echelons in a corrupted enforcement industry protected by cronyism, patriotism, and influential political and business leaders.

      Despite news reports like the above came about once a while in the press, it only meant to 'control' rather than eradication. There are at most only a handful influential power players in the black market.

      In Singapore, the Government knew it's difficult to eradicate prostitution, hence, they legalised the trade. Despite there's no law or regulation to formalised prostitution, prostitutes whom they, themselves, wanting to be "registered" participate in a self-monitoring health scheme. And once considered clean they are given a "card" for followups. Hence, these individuals are considered "legal" and only Singaporeans are allowed on such premise.

      Those prostitutes that hung out in Orchard road (Singapore) or those that conducted their businesses in so-called health spas or centers, they're illegal. Legalised prostitution in Singapore today is dying because it's overtaken by foreigners whom are "imported" or came into the country on their own accord as travellers. The Singapore government controls it by regularly conducting spot checks in various entertainment outlets, health centers and red-light districts. Eradication is always impossible because if the government pertains to eradication, there are men, whether domestic or foreign, wanting to seek pleasure, comfort, and relieve. And if they cannot opt a way out, Singapore residents will be in danger as well. Prostitution is always about 'yin' and 'yang'. Its how, both vice and control, strike out a balance.

      Cont. Below...

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    2. With the new Malaysian government at hand, there's no immediate eradication as the current Pakatan government is also a wait and see political machinery. However, that being said, all is not being lost. Despite the Pakatan government is bent on eradicating and removing the major players whether as corruption or those that play roles in this industry, there are huge strides made in these Mekong countries as well.

      Mekong countries have been taking matters into their own hands in the last 2 decades, and with its because the Thais and Chinese are forcing legitimate industries to take place, thus creating jobs. Poor people, especially in the rural communes may have faced uncertainties but the government are establishing schemes for them. In Thailand and during Thaksin Shinawatra era, he eradicated and brought prostitution to control in cities like Phuket, Pattaya, and Patpong in Bangkok. Despite some of these industries are still there, only a handful of joints are only visible in these cities. One of the biggest eradication is the A-Go-Go sex bars that can be seen even from the roadsides. Now these bars have been barred and A-Go-Go bars now have be operated in enclosed controlled districts monitored by legitimate private security contractors. With that, these bars only can be seen in places like 'Soi Nana' or 'Soi Cowboy' or very discrete spots in Patpong. In Phuket, there are no more A-Go-Go bars, there are only health centers or massage parlors. But laws, policies, and enforcement are only mechanisms, they don't deter and will never be. Singapore is one example and the state of Kelantan as well.

      Perhaps its sustainability.

      One of the major improvements seen is the shift of the drug trafficking industry in the Mekong region. When experts in the Thai monarchy and government saw the opportunities in coffee and horticultural industries, they undertook these opportunities by encouraging hill tribes and rural farmers (that have previously privileged upon poppy growing and production) to switch to amenable and sustainable means. There are currently in Thailand famous local brands of coffee like Doi Chang and Doi Tung and in Laos, Oregano. Despite its still gaining popularity, the coffee taste and brew have been endorsed by many Westerners coffee connoisseurs.

      That said, proselytizing coffee as a cash crop to replace poppies may not be an ideal methodology for prostitution. As Abraham Maslow pointed out that sex is indeed a basic need. In order to placate that need, we need to legalize it. Eradication can only cause harm, and violence may espouse not only as a violation of criminal laws but also create conflicts in families. Legalization will prove to appoint proper stakeholders for the work, decrease demands and control the industry, and importantly, eradicate predation, diseases, trafficking, and slavery. Prostitution will never end, its how the government chose to put it in perspective.

      Delete
    3. Cops: 15 people believed to be involved in immigrant smuggling arrested

      17 June 2019

      JOHOR BARU, June 17 — Johor police arrested 15 individuals believed to be involved in smuggling illegal immigrants into the country through ‘Ops Pintas Selatan’ in various places, including coastal areas, from May 13 to today.

      State Police Chief, Datuk Mohd Khalil Kader Mohd said operations covering 24 roadblocks across the district inspected 700 vehicles and 1,074 individuals of various ages.

      Additionally, it also includes patrol forces in coastal areas and Johor waters.

      “Those arrested were locals and Indonesians between the ages of 23 and 65.

      “They each play different roles, tekong darat (four people), taking care of ground-related operations (four people), transporters (three people), and water-related operations (four people), “ he told a media conference here today.

      He said, from the initial observation, all suspects were seen as “knowing each other” but they did not necessarily work for the same syndicate.

      “We will continue to curb this activity in different methods in the future because if we look at our 516-kilometer coastal line from Mersing to Muar, their landing can be anywhere,” he said.

      All suspects will be remanded today to be investigated under Sections 12 and 26C of the Anti-Trafficking In Persons and Migrants Anti-Smuggling Act (ATIPSOM) 2007.

      Meanwhile, Mohd Khalil explained that the number of under-18 children still missing in Johor remain at 56 people and not 143 as reported by a local newspaper earlier.

      “Investigations found that out of a total of 143 Reported Missing (children), 87 have returned safely to their family.

      “Problems for the police occurred when the families did not inform the police their children were back home,” he said.

      However, he said that the reason for the child missing was to follow friends, follow a lover, feeling depressed or having family problems.

      Statistics also show that the northern part of Johor Baru records the highest number of children missing with a total of 15 people; Kulai (10); Iskandar Puteri (eight); southern Johor Baru (seven); Seri Alam (five) as well as Batu Pahat and Kluang (two each).

      Last month, a local newspaper reported that Johor recorded the highest number of missing children with 143 followed by Selangor (140), Kuala Lumpur (115) and Sabah (99 persons).

      According to the checks on the Royal Malaysia Police Missing Children website, a total of 831 children were missing throughout the country for the period 2010 until last month.

      — Bernama
      https://www.malaymail.com/news/malaysia/2019/06/17/cops-15-people-believed-to-be-involved-in-immigrant-smuggling-arrested/1763058

      Delete
    4. This is only the tip of the iceberg... Expected to be more when MACC manifest more on its investigations and leanings.

      Delete
  12. Suspected people smuggler caught with ‘live’ bullets at Malaysia-Thai border

    Published on 11 June 2019

    ALOR SETAR, June 11 — The General Operations Force (GOF) apprehended a Myanmar man at a rubber smallholding near the Thai border, near Bukit Kayu Hitam, last Sunday for possessing 13 ‘live’ bullets.

    GOF 18th Battalion Commanding Officer, Supt Khalid Saion, said the 35-year-old man was stopped by a GOF team at 8.40pm who were on patrol after they noticed him behaving suspiciously.

    “He had no valid travel papers on him, and checking further, they found a total of 13 brandless 12 Bore shotgun bullets in his sling bag, which led to his arrest,” he told Bernama, here today.

    Khalid said the suspect, who could not converse in Malay, is believed to have been waiting to smuggle a group of foreigners into the country.

    “We are investigating the case from all angles, including what the bullets were meant to be used for,” he said, adding that the suspect was brought to the Kubang Pasu district police headquarters for further action.

    He said the arrest was part of the GOF’s successful monitoring of the Malaysian-Thai border under Ops Wawasan Kedah/Perlis since June 1.

    “We are also responsible in monitoring security at the Immigration, Customs, Quarantine and Security (ICQS) Complex in Padang Besar and in Wang Kelian as well as Kota Putra in Padang Terap,” he said.

    — Bernama
    https://www.malaymail.com/news/malaysia/2019/06/11/suspected-people-smuggler-caught-with-live-bullets-at-malaysia-thai-border/1761128

    ReplyDelete
  13. Four foreigners detained for militant links, including 2 Rohingya

    Rozanna Latiff, Reuters | Published: 9 Jul 2019, 8:43 pm

    Malaysia has detained four foreigners, including two ethnic Rohingya from Myanmar, on suspicion of being involved in militant groups, police said on Tuesday.

    Malaysia is home to tens of thousands of Rohingya Muslims, who have for years arrived in the Southeast Asian nation from Myanmar or Bangladesh seeking asylum.

    More than 700,000 Rohingya refugees fled western Myanmar for Bangladesh, UN agencies say, after insurgents attacked Myanmar security forces in August 2017, triggering a sweeping army-led crackdown.

    Both of the Rohingya suspects were detained for providing support to the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA), the insurgent group said to be behind the 2017 attacks, Inspector-General of Police Abdul Hamid Bador said in a statement.

    One of the suspects, a 41-year-old construction worker, had also issued a death threat against Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina in a video uploaded on social media, Hamid said.

    Other suspects detained included a 54-year-old Philippine national with alleged ties to Abu Sayyaf, a militant organisation aligned with the Islamic State.

    The man is also suspected of being involved in kidnapping activities in the waters of Sabah state, south of the Philippines, Hamid said.

    The fourth suspect was a 24-year-old Indian national who had allegedly acted as a facilitator to a senior member of Babbar Khalsa International (BKI), a Sikh separatist group.

    The suspect, a lift maintenance worker, is accused of transferring RM7,600 to fund BKI's activities in Southeast Asia, Abdul Hamid said.

    Malaysia has been on high alert since gunmen allied with Islamic State carried out a series of attacks in Jakarta, the capital of neighbouring Indonesia, in January 2016.

    A grenade attack on a bar on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur in June 2016 wounded eight people. Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack, the first such strike on Malaysian soil.

    - Reuters
    - Mkini
    https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/483116

    ReplyDelete
  14. UN: Southeast Asia meth gangs make $60b a year
    Much of it originates from remote and lawless state in Myanmar

    Published: July 18, 2019 15:49; AFP

    Bangkok: Southeast Asia’s drug gangs are making more than $60 billion (Dh220 billion) a year pumping out record amounts of methamphetamine, then laundering the profits through the region’s mushrooming number of casinos, a UN study showed Thursday.

    Crime groups are also piggybacking on improved infrastructure to hustle Made-In-Myanmar meth to neighbouring drug markets, and as far as Australia and Japan, the report said.

    The study, by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), warned this was sending street prices tumbling and spurring an addiction crisis.

    “[A] safe, conservative estimate of over $60 billion a year,” is being hoovered up by the meth lords of Southeast Asia alone, Jeremy Douglas, the UNODC’s regional representative, told reporters in Bangkok at the report’s launch.

    Seizures of methamphetamine - both the caffeine-cut ‘yaba’ tablets and the much more addictive and potent crystal meth or ‘ice’ version — had tripled over the last five years, according to the report.

    Last year 120 tonnes (120,000kg) of meth was seized in East and Southeast Asia, up from around 40 tonnes in 2013, the report said.

    The figures were based on drug seizure figures and regional police intelligence.

    Much of the meth is originating from the labs of remote and lawless Northern Shan State in Myanmar, which has rebooted the ‘Golden Triangle’ drug trade from its staple of heroin.

    Epicentre

    “This region is the epicentre of the global synthetic drug trade,” Douglas said.

    Around $10 billion annually continues to be made from Golden Triangle heroin, with China the world’s largest market, according to the report.

    But meth is the new cash cow.

    The study shows increasingly sophisticated and diverse drug gangs are shuttling it across Asia - cooked by Taiwanese chemists, orchestrated by shadowy financiers from Thailand, Macau and China, and run by Myanmar producers who brand their ‘ice’ in tea-packages.

    Outlaw motorcycle gangs from Australia and New Zealand are getting in on the act moving massive shipments from Southeast Asia to their domestic markets, where the price surges, the “Transnational Organized Crime in Southeast Asia: Evolution, Growth and Impact” study added.

    The illicit billions are being cleaned in the increasing number of casinos springing up across the Mekong area - from Myanmar, Laos to Cambodia, according to the study.

    “The producers and traffickers that dominate launder through cash based businesses like casinos, hotels, as well as real estate,” Douglas added.

    The report also said tens of billions of dollars were being spun from counterfeit medicines, clothes and cigarettes, as well as the illegal wildlife and timber trade and human trafficking.

    Thailand sits at the heart of Mekong area, with hard to police land and sea borders making it a sluice for drugs, wildlife and counterfeit goods.

    - AFP
    -Gulfnews.com
    https://gulfnews.com/world/asia/un-southeast-asia-meth-gangs-make-60b-a-year-1.65296773

    ReplyDelete
  15. Transnational crime expanding aggressively in and beyond South-east Asia: UN Report

    PUBLISHED: JUL 18, 2019

    Nirmal Gosh

    WASHINGTON - Of the total number of victims trafficked for sexual exploitation in South-east Asia between 2016 and 2018, almost 70 per cent were underage girls.

    That, and a range of other transnational criminal activity such as drug and wildlife trafficking, is laid out in a new report on transnational organised crime in the region from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

    Exploiting gaps in enforcement and information sharing, and riding on corruption, transnational organised crime has expanded "aggressively" in the region and achieved global reach, said the 194-page report - the most comprehensive in five years.

    "The fact is that while law enforcement and border management in the region are robust in some jurisdictions, they are effectively not functioning in others, and limited cross-border cooperation and corruption are serious problems," says the report, Transnational Organised Crime in South East Asia: Evolution, Growth and Impact.

    "Criminal networks operating in South-east Asia have achieved global reach, trafficking unfathomable quantities of high-profit methamphetamine, massive consignments of wildlife and forest products, and an increasing range of counterfeit consumer and industrial goods.

    "They also continue to engage in the smuggling of migrants and trafficking in persons for the purposes of sexual and labour exploitation," it says.

    "While transnational organised crime syndicates use their financial muscle to further corrupt and undermine the rule of law, they are also destroying the lives of countless people in South-east Asia" the report concludes.

    Cont. Below...

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    Replies
    1. The region needs to develop a functional strategy to address transnational crime, it warns. National and regional data collection and reporting must be strengthened, and cross-border cooperation improved.

      "A greater degree of cross-border intelligence collection and exchange between and among ASEAN member states is also necessary," it recommends. "It is important that countries take steps to increase collaborative intelligence gathering, law enforcement operations and criminal justice responses. This should also include initiatives to support regional networks of law enforcement officials and financial intelligence units."

      The threat of transnational organised crime is most vividly illustrated by the unprecedented growth in recent years of methamphetamine production and trafficking. South-east Asia's illicit methamphetamine market, and that of East Asia, Australia, New Zealand, and Bangladesh are "inter-connected and now estimated to be worth between US$30.3 and US$61.4 billion annually," the report says.

      It notes that Australia, Japan, New Zealand and the Republic of Korea account for about one-third of the high-end estimated total value of the methamphetamine market as a result of disproportionately high wholesale and retail prices for methamphetamine.

      Human trafficking for sexual exploitation accounted for roughly 79 per cent of the total number of cases in Thailand from 2014 through 2017, primarily involving female victims from the Mekong region, but also from some countries in Africa, the Middle East, Central Asia, Russia, and Sri Lanka, it says - adding that of the total number of victims trafficked for sexual exploitation, almost 70 per cent were underage girls.

      "Most of the trafficking cases reported in Malaysia in recent years have also been related to sexual exploitation, accounting for roughly 60 to 73 per cent from 2016 through 2018, with the vast majority of victims being women and girls," the report says.

      Cont. Below...

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    2. Wildlife and timber theft is rampant as well. "Multi-ton ivory seizures, sometimes along with smaller quantities of rhino horn, have been made in Vietnam and Hong Kong, China, but also in mainland China, Cambodia, Lao PDR, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand," the report notes.

      "The trafficking of African pangolins and their scales to markets in East and South-east Asia has also rapidly emerged as a major problem. The increase in the trafficking of African pangolins has followed the decimation of Asian pangolin populations."

      In yet another avenue of transnational crime, the report cites data to arrive at the conclusion that the amount of money spent by consumers in South-east Asia on fake medicines, ranges between US$520 million and US$2.6 billion per year.

      Intelligence reports indicate that major criminal syndicates and financiers based in Macau, Hong Kong, China, and Thailand, working with criminal networks and chemists from Taiwan, have become dominant players in the production and trafficking of methamphetamine and other synthetic drugs.

      "Organised criminal networks penetrate public agencies and private organisations, relying on bribery, conflicts of interest, trading in influence and collusion in order to facilitate their criminal activities," the report warns. Trafficking of precursor chemicals used to make methamphetamines; illegal wildlife and timber; and counterfeit goods, relies on bribery and document fraud to falsify the content and origins of illicit cargo, and documents are often forged or approved by corrupt customs and border officials, it says.

      And vast sums of money find a ready laundry in an expanding number of casinos in the region - especially in Cambodia, one of the poorest countries in the region, which as of January 2019 had 150 licensed casinos, compared with 57 in 2014.

      Also as of January 2019, there were 67 licensed casinos in the Philippines, and five in Laos and Myanmar, the report says.

      "Many of these casinos emerged after a crackdown on money laundering activities in Macau, China, in 2014, raising concerns that a 'displacement' of criminal activities associated with casinos has taken place to South-east Asia, especially to jurisdictions in the Mekong region that lack regulatory oversight and enforcement capacity," it adds.

      - The Strait Times
      https://www.straitstimes.com/world/united-states/transnational-crime-expanding-aggressively-in-and-beyond-south-east-asia-un

      Delete
  16. Organised crime fast expanding in and beyond South-east Asia: UN

    Report calls for functional strategy to deal with rise in transnational criminal activities

    PUBLISHED: JUL 19, 2019

    Nirmal Ghosh US Bureau Chief In Washington

    Underage girls made up nearly 70 per cent of the total number of victims trafficked for sexual exploitation in South-east Asia between 2016 and 2018.

    This, and other transnational criminal activities such as drug and wildlife trafficking, is laid out in a new report on transnational organised crime in the region from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

    Exploiting gaps in enforcement and information sharing, riding on corruption, and laundering money often through casinos, transnational organised crime has expanded "aggressively" in the region and achieved global reach, said the 194-page report, the most comprehensive in five years.

    "While law enforcement and border management in the region are robust in some jurisdictions, they are effectively not functioning in others, and limited cross-border cooperation and corruption are serious problems," the report, Transnational Organised Crime in South-east Asia: Evolution, Growth and Impact, says.

    "Criminal networks in South-east Asia have achieved global reach, trafficking unfathomable quantities of high-profit methamphetamine, massive consignments of wildlife and forest products, and an increasing range of counterfeit consumer and industrial goods. They also continue to engage in the smuggling of migrants and trafficking in persons for the purposes of sexual and labour exploitation," it says.

    "While transnational organised crime syndicates use their financial muscle to further corrupt and undermine the rule of law, they are also destroying the lives of countless people in South-east Asia," the report concludes.

    The region needs a functional strategy to address transnational crime, and national and regional data collection and reporting must be strengthened, it says.

    "It is important that countries take steps to increase collaborative intelligence gathering, law enforcement operations and criminal justice responses. This should also include initiatives to support regional networks of law enforcement officials and financial intelligence units."

    The threat of transnational organised crime is most vividly illustrated by the unprecedented growth of methamphetamine production and trafficking. The region's illicit methamphetamine market and those of East Asia, Australia, New Zealand and Bangladesh are "inter-connected and estimated to be worth between US$30.3 billion and US$61.4 billion (S$41 billion and S$84 billion) annually".

    Human trafficking for sexual exploitation accounted for roughly 79 per cent of the total number of cases in Thailand from 2014 through 2017, primarily involving female victims from the Mekong region. The report adds that of the total number of victims trafficked for sexual exploitation, almost 70 per cent were underage girls.

    "Most of the trafficking cases reported in Malaysia in recent years have also been related to sexual exploitation, accounting for roughly 60 to 73 per cent from 2016 through 2018," the report says.

    Wildlife and timber theft is also rampant. "Multi-tonne ivory seizures, sometimes along with smaller quantities of rhino horn, have been made in Vietnam and Hong Kong, China, but also in mainland China, Cambodia, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand," it says.

    The trafficking of African pangolins and their scales to markets in East and South-east Asia has also rapidly emerged as a major problem, following the decimation of the species in Asia.

    On fake medicines, the report cites data for its conclusion that consumers in South-east Asia spent between US$520 million and US$2.6 billion on these a year.

    The Straits Times
    https://www.straitstimes.com/world/united-states/organised-crime-fast-expanding-in-and-beyond-s-e-asia-un

    ReplyDelete
  17. Southeast Asia needs a border management training hub

    10 Jul 2019|John Coyne

    In 2018, Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong predicted that in a little over a decade the ASEAN economy will become the world’s fourth largest, behind only the US, China and that of the European Union.

    Lee has good reason for such optimism. The ASEAN region is already home to four of the world’s fastest growing economies. The Chinese government’s Belt and Road Initiative, which includes the construction of land routes (the Silk Road Economic Belt) and sea routes (the 21st-century Maritime Silk Road), is providing global economic opportunities, including access to markets through faster, more secure and more affordable transportation. In parallel, the comprehensive and ambitious blueprint for realising the ASEAN Economic Community promotes the increasingly free flow of goods, services, investments and skilled labour.

    Unfortunately, while the momentum of the ASEAN economic integration agenda has increased since the publication of the ASEAN political-security community blueprint 2025, security integration hasn’t kept pace.

    The ASEAN ‘single window’ harmonisation of national trade and customs procedures along regional air, sea and land routes is increasing the velocity at which people and goods move across international borders within the region. At the same time, the numbers of people and volumes of goods crossing those borders continue to rise, and the traditional approaches to border management applied by most member states are no longer able keep pace.

    Collectively, these factors are substantially reducing the effectiveness of national border management controls, which in turn is creating new security vulnerabilities.

    A vital and increasingly important response to this challenge has been the UN Office on Drugs and Crime’s Border Liaison Office (BLO) program. The BLO program was established under the auspices of the Regional Programme for Southeast Asia and the Pacific 2014–2017. Through this initiative, BLO officials are provided with training, tools, systems and equipment to improve border management and cross-border cooperation.

    The BLO network currently consists of 70 offices located strategically at major crossing points along international land borders in the Mekong region. The offices are responsible for facilitating and promoting cross-border law enforcement collaboration, including operational coordination and information and intelligence sharing. Over recent years, the BLO network has made significant contributions to the disruption of illicit supply chains and transnational serious and organised crime syndicates.

    Cont. Below...

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    Replies
    1. Given the success of the program to date, and the significance of the region’s transnational threats, Australia should now focus on how we might support the continued development of the BLO program.

      While much of Australia’s operational law enforcement success in the region can be attributed to strong police-to-police cooperation, it has also been highly effective at promoting multilateral law enforcement cooperation and capacity development. The Jakarta Centre for Law Enforcement Cooperation (JCLEC) has been invaluable to these broader regional engagement efforts.

      JCLEC was created by Canberra and Jakarta in the wake of the 2002 Bali bombing investigation by the Indonesian National Police (POLRI), which exposed weaknesses in Indonesia’s capacity to investigate and disrupt terrorist networks. In 2004, the Australian Federal Police and POLRI agreed to establish a joint training school to enhance Indonesia’s capacity to respond to transnational crime and terrorism. From the beginning, JCLEC was focused on regional issues.

      For 13 years, JCLEC has been a regional rallying point for much-needed counterterrorism capacity development and cooperation. More than 24,000 officials from 70 countries have trained at the centre since 2004. The capacity of many ASEAN police forces to undertake complex terror and criminal investigations has been dramatically improved by JCLEC training.

      Australia should now consider the creation of a regional border management training hub, similar to JCLEC, to support the BLO program and regional cooperation. This training hub should be viewed as a regional activity that builds on the success of JCLEC.

      The hub should be established in a Mekong state, given the number and length of land borders in that region. Thailand would be a strong contender because of its government’s continued focus on border management in the region.

      The hub’s focus should be on border management and the promotion of border security cooperation. The curriculum would need a strong focus on the delivery of training on the planning and conduct of border operations. Courses would also need to be concentrated on enhancing the capacity of participants to identify and interdict the illegal movement and trafficking of people, narcotic drugs and precursor chemicals, wildlife, timber and counterfeit goods.

      Importantly, the hub could also—like JCLEC—play a critical role in gathering together regional partners to create the low-key informal relationships of trust that make cooperation possible.

      The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade should also consider supporting the BLO program as part of its official development aid investment in countering transnational crime in Southeast Asia. This investment should, as a priority, look to develop border management information-sharing capabilities, such as ICT infrastructure, in the Mekong region.

      Cross-border or intra-regional cooperation in ASEAN is hampered by the stark differences in border management capacity across the region. As ASEAN continues to reach consensus on economic integration, this issue will need to be addressed through common minimum border management standards.

      Now is a perfect time for Australia to offer practical support to increase regional border management cooperation before further regional security vulnerabilities are created.

      AUTHOR
      John Coyne is the head of the Strategic Policing and Law Enforcement program at ASPI.

      - The Strategist - Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI)
      - https://www.aspistrategist.org.au/southeast-asia-needs-a-border-management-training-hub/

      Delete
  18. Southeast Asian countries complete maritime law enforcement exercise

    Ni Komang Erviani, The Jakarta Post

    Denpasar / Sun, June 30, 2019

    In an attempt to increase maritime security in the region, coast guards from six Southeast Asian countries shared their best practices on tackling illegal fishing and drug trafficking.

    The US Coast Guard, in partnership with Indonesia’s Maritime Security Agency (Bakamla), helped train coast guards from the region in an exercise at Benoa Harbor in Bali on Friday morning.

    The hands-on exercise was conducted on board two fishing vessels to enhance the confidence of officers in conducting boarding procedures and vessel inspections. Participants came from Southeast Asian countries, including Indonesia, Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam.

    The Friday exercise was part of the Southeast Asia Maritime Law Enforcement Initiative's (SEAMLEI) Technical Experts Workshop (TEW), held in Bali for five days from June 24 to 28. The TEW event was hosted by Bakamla and supported by the United States' Mission to ASEAN and the US Coast Guard. It was attended by over 90 technical officers and specialists of maritime law enforcement bodies in Southeast Asia.

    “This event has a special meaning, especially for countries in the Southeast Asia region. Our main target is to help each other understand how coast guards from the region conduct their tasks on maritime safety and maritime security,” Bakamla director for exercises First Admiral Yeheskiel Katiandagho said.

    The SEAMLEI, formerly known as the Gulf of Thailand Maritime Law Enforcement Initiative (GOTI), is a regional forum meant to increase maritime law enforcement cooperation and information-sharing among Southeast Asian nations.

    The GOTI was established in 2012 as a partnership between the United States and the maritime law enforcement agencies of the four countries bordering the Gulf of Thailand – Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam – to enable seamless collaboration among these agencies in the region. In 2018, it was expanded to include the Philippines and Indonesia.

    Prior to the Friday exercise, the US Coast Guard and Bakamla also facilitated an extensive professional exchange through group discussions and briefings by SEAMLEI members and experts. The workshops included theoretical aspects related to maritime boarding as a complement to the hands-on training. The topics also included national laws and regulations, maritime domain awareness and information-sharing.

    Capt. Sherman Lacey from the US Coast Guard said Southeast Asia had become increasingly important to the US.

    “Our national strategy has identified that Southeast Asia is critically important, both to the United States and to the global economy. So the United States has been involved in friendship with Southeast Asia for a very long time, and it’s critical that the United States remains involved,” he said.

    As part of its support for the event, the US Coast Guard brought its expertise to the table, particularly its experience in dealing with nontraditional transnational and regional maritime threats.

    Twelve experts from the US, including seven trainers, participated in the event.

    "At this particular event, we chose to focus on drugs and illegal fishing,” Lacey said, adding that the same event was expected to be held next year with different issues to be explored. (ipa)

    - The Jakarta Post
    - https://www.thejakartapost.com/seasia/2019/06/30/southeast-asian-countries-complete-maritime-law-enforcement-exercise.html

    ReplyDelete
  19. 10,000 Thai security forces to hunt down Pattani attack suspects

    Bernama | Published: 26 Jul 2019

    Thai authorities deployed nearly 10,000 security personnel to track down 20 suspects identified to be involved in an attack on a security control post in Muang District, Pattani on Tuesday.

    Fourth Division Army chief, Lt.Gen Pornsak Poonsawat said that the security personnel in about 735 teams would be sent to 118 villages which were identified as still having the strong influence of the Pattani Liberation Movement.

    "We want the suspects to retreat from the villages. Our investigation found that there were houses which were modified to be used as hiding places for members of armed groups after an attack," Pronsak told reporters in Pattani yesterday.

    On Tuesday, four were killed and two were seriously injured in an attack on a security control post in Muang District, Pattani.

    In the 8pm (local time) incident, a group of individuals, equipped with firearms shot up and also threw a pipe bomb toward the post killing two volunteer members and two village security members while seriously injuring two other volunteers.

    Pornsak also did not rule out the possibility that a suspect involved in the attack was also injured.

    - Bernama
    - Mkini
    - https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/485477

    ReplyDelete
  20. Alarmed by growing trafficking, US wants to do more in Mekong region

    Nirmal Ghosh, US Bureau Chief, PUBLISHED: JUL 25, 2019

    WASHINGTON - The United States is set to beef up its approach to Mekong countries, pledging more financial assistance with an eye on combating transnational organised crime.

    Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is expected to attend Asean-related meetings in Thailand in the first week of next month. Sources say he will pledge more financial assistance to countries in the Lower Mekong Initiative - Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam - to beef up training and assistance to governments and law enforcement.

    The objective is to better tackle growing trafficking in methamphetamine and wildlife and natural resources, which rides on endemic corruption and weak law enforcement.

    This will also put more muscle into the LMI, which grew out of former president Barack Obama's "pivot to Asia" but thus far has been perceived by many as strong on messaging but thin on content.

    The seizure in Singapore on July 21 of 11.9 tonnes of pangolin scales and 8.8 tonnes of elephant ivory - a record for Singapore - being shipped from the Democratic Republic of the Congo to Vietnam, coming just four days after an extensive UN report warned of the expanding reach of transnational criminal organisations, was a reminder that more robust action is needed, analysts say.

    The meth trade emanating principally out of de facto autonomous zones of northern Myanmar has also exploded. Meth from Myanmar has been found across the wider region. In March 2019, 2.1 tonnes were found in Johor, Malaysia. In December 2017, 1.2 tonnes were found in Perth, Australia.

    According to investigations, the meth found in Johor was trafficked from Myanmar through Laos and Thailand. The shipment found in Perth came from Myanmar via Indonesia.

    Mr John Whalen, a retired US Drug Enforcement Agency official based in Yangon, told The Straits Times: "The problem in Myanmar particularly is you have weak law enforcement, so it's a breeding ground in some respects for organised crime. The police in particular are very low-paid so they are easily corruptible; the military particularly in outlying areas is easily corruptible. All along the process people are paid off, and not just in Myanmar but on porous borders of the region."

    "I think the US should be doing more," he added.

    With Myanmar's transition to an elected government in 2011, the US was able to open up the relationship with Myanmar, lifting sanctions and providing training, but not to the level necessary, he said.

    Cont. Below...

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    Replies
    1. In an e-mail, Mr Jeremy Douglas, Bangkok-based regional representative of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, said: "Massive syndicates concentrating industrial levels of synthetic drug production in ungoverned parts of Myanmar are shipping great distances using the great infrastructure of the region, laundering huge profits across the Mekong."

      "Unless the conditions that have allowed organised crime to innovate and expand the drug business here are addressed, it will continue to grow," he warned.

      "Asean is simply not capable of addressing organised crime and synthetic drugs alone, and needs to work at the highest levels with key dialogue partners like the US, China, Canada, Australia, Japan, Korea and the UN. The business does not stop at the borders of the region. It is not possible to get around the fact that countries of Asia Pacific, or at least the western part of the Pacific and North America, need to come together at leadership level to prioritise taking on organised crime."

      The US sees drug and wildlife trafficking - and related money laundering - as a global problem.

      "Over time, international criminal networks are meeting up with each other, there is interaction between criminal elements in one region connected to another," Ms Kirsten Madison, US Assistant Secretary for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL), said in an interview.

      "Criminal organisations are becoming much more evolved criminal multinational businesses in some respect," she said. To work on how the money is moving, and to work regionally, is a growing imperative.

      The INL works with foreign governments to combat money laundering, terrorism financing, migrant smuggling, corruption, and cyber, intellectual property and environmental crime, and wildlife and drug trafficking among others.

      "We often talk about counter-narcotics issues, but the reality is that transnational organised crime is operating across a lot of spheres," Ms Madison said. "And when you look at wildlife trafficking, not only is it disturbing from the perspective of loss of species and environmental impact, but it is an enormous source of funding for criminal actors. And to be successful, criminal actors need to corrupt and poison institutions."

      Interceptions of contraband show that seizures alone are failing to deter traffickers, Mr Justin Gosling, an independent consultant on transnational wildlife trafficking, told The Straits Times.

      "What's missing is basic detective work - exploring every reasonable line of inquiry to exhaustion. In most cases, that starts with the country detecting the crime communicating with every other country involved so that they can initiate their own investigations," he said.

      "That's what we mean by international cooperation. Agencies like Interpol must be more engaged in their core function - to help national enforcement agencies coordinate inquiries, and collate evidence and intelligence."

      - The Straits Times
      - https://www.straitstimes.com/world/united-states/alarmed-by-growing-trafficking-us-wants-to-do-more-in-mekong-region

      Delete
  21. Senoi Praaq to join the fight against poachers

    Bernama, July 28, 2019.

    PUTRAJAYA: Two General Operations Force battalions of Senoi Praaq have been deployed to assist the Wildlife Department to hunt down poachers in the forests, especially poachers hunting for the Malayan tiger which is now in danger of becoming extinct, said Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Abdul Hamid Bador.

    He said one of the battalions, comprising 500 members, would conduct patrols in identified forest areas with the Wildlife and National Parks Department, while the other would be placed on stand-by.

    Hamid said as the IGP, it was his responsibility to provide whatever assistance required by the water, land and natural resources ministry in conjunction with today’s Save The Tiger Day.

    “My purpose of giving the task to the Senoi Praaq (Battalion) is because they are skilled as trackers and they are also used to the jungle environment.

    “This is the land in which their ancestors earned their living and now the situation is getting worse with foreigners unscrupulously coming to rob the rich fauna in the country,” he told the media after attending the Global Tiger Day 2019 and launch of the Save Harimau Malaya 2019-2020 campaign here today.

    Hamid said the police would also provide training to Wildlife officers and personnel on the use of firearms and will also provide standard procedures to deal with threats from illegal hunters.

    “So, the Senoi Praaq battalion is ready to assist the Wildlife Department… their lives are threatened by illegal hunters from abroad who are bold and vicious. We will shoot them, if necessary,” he added.

    Hamid said he had also instructed the Special Branch to set up a special section to gather information on illegal hunters and those involved in trafficking wild animal parts.

    “The Special Branch is also given the responsibility to monitor sandalwood. This means we monitor everything including the flora. Everything that is stolen from the jungle, action will be taken by the police,” he added.

    The minister for natural resources, Xavier Jayakumar, said three areas would be given focus: Belum-Temenggor Tropical Forest, Pahang-Terengganu National Park and Endau Rompin National Park.

    - BERNAMA
    - FMT
    - https://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/nation/2019/07/28/senoi-praaq-to-join-the-fight-against-poachers/

    ReplyDelete
  22. Smugglers take RM3 billion bite out of govt revenue

    Bernama - July 28, 2019

    SUNGAI PETANI: The federal government has suffered losses of between RM3 billion and RM5 billion a year due to revenue leakages at the country’s entry points, said Chief Secretary to the Government Ismail Bakar.

    He said the revenue leakages were due to smuggling activities, either due to negligence or lack of equipment to monitor and control the border.

    “The revenue leakages have been going on for a long time. We do have data on revenue leakages, especially in terms of our negligence or inadequate equipment, for example, cigarette and liquor smuggling. This is still happening,” he told a press conference here after a meeting with the heads of state and federal departments of Kedah and Perlis.

    Without elaborating on the data, Ismail said the use of new technologies to monitor border crossings should be upgraded to prevent the country from losing revenue there.

    He said monitoring of civil servants in charge of the entrances should also be carried out from time to time to ensure they are capable of carrying out their duties.

    Ismail also said civil servants should work to increase cooperation with politicians, especially those who are members of the administration.

    “We have to improve cooperation but it does not mean we should be involved in politics. We must look at civil servants as being neutral (in politics) and who have to perform certain tasks. We are the backbone of the government,” he said.

    - BERNAMA
    - FMT
    - https://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/nation/2019/07/28/smugglers-take-rm3-billion-bite-out-of-govt-revenue/#

    ReplyDelete
  23. Textron, Martin Win $99.5M For U.S. Army Scout Drone: FTUAS

    The new drone is just one part of an ambitious overhaul of Army aviation.

    By Sydney J. Freedberg, Jr. on March 28, 2019

    HUNTSVILLE: The Army has given Textron AAI and Martin UAV $99.5 million each to provide scout drones for testing as possible replacements for the current Shadow, the service announced this afternoon. By January, six brigades will get sample drones to use in training, including high-intensity wargames at Combat Training Centers, and their feedback will shape the Army’s final decision on a Future Tactical Unmanned Aerial System. If all goes well, a formal FTUAS acquisition will start in 2021.

    The FTUAS project is just one piece of the Army’s increasingly ambitious aviation overhaul, which also includes larger drones to replace the Grey Eagle (a Predator variant), air-launched mini-drones, and replacements for both the UH-60 Black Hawk transport and the retired OH-58 Kiowa scout. (The AH-64 Apache gunship will stay in service indefinitely). Collectively, these programs make up the Army’s Future Vertical Lift portfolio, which is the service’s No. 3 modernization priority, behind long-range artillery and new armored vehicles but ahead of networks, air & missile defense, and soldier equipment.

    The manned aircraft will be designed and developed specifically for the Army, with some Marine and Special Operations input on the transport. But the Army’s aviation modernization director, Brig. Gen. Wally Rugen, told reporters here at the AUSA Global conference that industry is moving so fast on drones the Army can meet most of its needs off-the-shelf, with a wide range of companies providing viable options.

    In fact, 11 companies competed for FTUAS, although the Army didn’t name the losing nine. Fifty percent of each competitor’s score was based on a live fly-off at Dugway Proving Ground in Utah in December and January, fifty percent on evaluations of written proposals, Army officials told reporters here this morning.

    The Army has used the Shadow since 2001, and the aging drone is no longer state of the art. The service wants its new scout drone, FTUAS, to be

    quieter, so the enemy doesn’t hear it coming and either hide or shoot it down;
    smaller, so a scout drone unit can deploy in a single CH-47 Chinook helicopter instead of two and a half C-130 turboprops; and
    capable of taking off and landing without a runway, which Shadow requires.

    Currently, a Shadow platoon has four drones — only some of them are in the air at any given time, while the others are maintained and refueled — plus ground control terminals and support equipment. The potential replacements are similar but not necessarily the same in terms of number of drones and ground support items.

    The Shadow is unarmed and there is no plan to arm the FTUAS drone, Army officials said.

    - Breaking Defense
    - https://breakingdefense.com/2019/03/textron-martin-win-army-scout-drone-ftuas/

    ReplyDelete
  24. Senate approves amendments to Fisheries Act

    Bernama | Published: 29 Jul 2019

    The Fisheries (Amendment) Bill 2019 which aims, among others, to increase the general penalty for offences under the Fisheries Act was approved by the Senate today.

    The bill proposed to increase the maximum penalty for an owner or captain of a foreign vessel caught trespassing into Malaysian waters to RM6 million, from RM1 million, and the penalty for every crew member from RM100,000 to RM600,000.

    It was passed at a session chaired by Dewan Negara president SA Vigneswaran after 19 senators participated in the debate.

    Agriculture and Agro-based Industry Minister Salahuddin Ayub (above) said the amendment to increase the fine was apt as the current fine under the Fisheries Act was very low compared with other countries in the region.

    “The amendment is in line with international instruments... what is important is that we have given a clear signal that we are ready to enforce the fine," he said in his winding-up speech on the bill.

    On addressing the problem of cloned boats, Salahuddin said the government, through the Fisheries Department, was stepping up local vessel identification and security by using QR Barcode, Radio Frequency Identification (RFID), apart from the strict licensing system using satellite, that is the mobile tracking unit.

    Also approved by the Senate today is the Revision of Laws (Amendment) Bill 2019) to authorise the Commissioner of Law Revision under the Revision of Laws Act 1968 to make any changes in any of the written laws.

    The bill, which was tabled by Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Mohamed Hanipa Maidin, was proposed following the restructuring of agencies and functions of the ministries, as well as the change in the name of ministries.

    “There is a need to address references to existing laws regarding the posts of ministers that have changed and the functions or responsibilities that have been transferred to other ministers," he said.

    - Bernama
    - Mkini
    - https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/485905

    ReplyDelete
  25. Drug lab raids in Myanmar's meth capital met with artillery fire

    By AFP - August 1, 2019 @ 7:26pm

    YANGON: Raids on jungle drug labs have been met with heavy artillery fire, Myanmar narcotics police said Thursday, in an area riddled with armed groups accused of pumping out much of the world's methamphetamine.

    Myanmar is under increasingly intense pressure from its neighbours to close down the meth labs festooning lawless parts of Shan State, the heart of the notorious "Golden Triangle".

    A major crackdown kicked off last month in Kutkai township, northern Shan, the army has said, where an entwined network of drug lords, ethnic rebel groups and security forces are accused of running a shadow drug economy worth billions of dollars.

    Huge stockpiles of chemicals as well as millions of dollars of ice -- the highly addictive crystalised form of meth -- were seized in one raid on homespun labs buried deep in the jungle.

    "The crackdown is ongoing," a senior police officer from the anti-drugs squad told AFP, requesting anonymity.

    The army and drug police initially conducted raids in the area on July 21 but were repelled by "heavy artillery" at the site, the officer said.

    They returned several days later, busting a massive production site of nearly 100 huts.

    Police seized 750 kilograms (1,650 pounds) of ice worth an estimated $10.5 million along with 9,000 yaba pills -- caffeine-laced meth tablets -- the army said.

    They also found thousands of acid barrels and bottles, stoves, fridges, power generators and tea bags, which are often used to disguise drugs for smuggling.

    Rare photos of the cook houses showed rudimentary huts made from tree trunks and tarps.

    The country's largest ever drug bust was in the same area last year where police seized 30 million yaba pills, 1,750 kilograms of crystal meth and 500 kilograms of heroin with a domestic value of around $54 million.

    The "Golden Triangle" -- a lawless wedge of land intersecting China, Myanmar, Thailand and Laos -- has long served as a base for opium and heroin production.

    But methamphetamine production from Myanmar has risen to "alarming levels", according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

    The country is now believed to be the world's biggest producer of meth.

    Drugs fan out across Southeast Asia thanks to porous borders, weak law enforcement and sophisticated money laundering networks often run out of casinos.

    Made-in-Myanmar meth is being trafficked as far afield as Australia, where its price surges.

    - AFP
    - NST
    - https://www.nst.com.my/world/2019/08/509130/drug-lab-raids-myanmars-meth-capital-met-artillery-fire

    ReplyDelete
  26. This Strange Solar-Powered Drone Could Save You in a Disaster

    August 1st 2019 by Kristin Houser

    If you’re ever in a disaster and see a weird-looking aircraft flying overhead, don’t fret — it could be there to help you.

    For two years, Chinese aircraft manufacturer OXAI Aircraft Co. has been developing MOZI 2, a fully solar-powered unmanned aircraft it hopes will one day help out in disaster relief situations.

    On Saturday, the drone took its maiden flight at an airport in Deqing County — and it appears the test went off without a hitch.

    OXAI Aircraft told Xinhua that MOZI 2 has a wingspan of 15 meters (49 feet) and is powered solely by solar cells. It can reach an altitude of 8,000 meters (nearly 5 miles), with a maximum cruise time of 12 hours at night following eight hours of charging in sunlight.

    In addition to contributing to disaster relief scenarios, the solar-powered drone could be useful for reconnaissance missions and communication efforts, OXAI Aircraft told Xinhua — and now that it knows the craft can fly, it can start working toward those applications.

    – Xinhua
    https://futurism.com/the-byte/solar-powered-drone-disaster-relief

    ReplyDelete
  27. Int'l road transport launched in Greater Mekong Subregion

    Source: Xinhua| 2019-05-30; Editor: Mu Xuequan

    NANNING, May 30 (Xinhua) -- The international road transport (China-Laos-Vietnam) in the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) has been launched as two Chinese logistics firms obtained GMS temporary entry documents for motor vehicles on Wednesday.

    With the new permission, goods can be directly transported to Laos and Thailand, with clearance time drastically shortened, said Yan Ke, deputy general manager of the Nanning Xinjinhang Materials Co., Ltd, one of the operators.

    As one of the major goals of the GMS, the new cooperation will promote transport and facilitate trade, said Fei Zhirong, vice chairman of National Transport Facilitation Committee of China, adding it will also boost cross-border transportation between Nanning, Vietnam, Laos and Thailand.

    Convenient cross-border transport is expected to meet the needs of GMS countries for the carriage of goods and personnel exchanges, said Phan Thi Thu Hine, deputy director general of the Directorate for Roads of Vietnam.

    Viengsavath Siphandone, vice minister of Public Works and Transport of Laos, said countries along the route will forge ahead with the development of the GMS East-West economic corridor and opening-up of the region.

    The national transport facilitation committee of the Greater Mekong Subregion approved an MoU in March, adding 11 new routes to the original ones.

    The GMS covers the Mekong River basin in Southeast Asia, bringing together China and five countries -- Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam.

    - Xinhuanet
    - http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2019-05/30/c_138103584.htm

    ReplyDelete
  28. Dawei road project poses risks to threatened species: WWF

    Swe Lei Mon 16 Jul 2019

    Myanmar’s rainforests and at least nine globally-threatened species face significant risks in Tanintharyi Region if the Dawei-Htee Khee road project continues without a comprehensive biodiversity protection plan, according to the World Wildlife Fund.

    The WWF released a report, “Nature in Peril: The risk of forests and wildlife from the Dawei-Htee Khee road” on Thursday.

    Construction began on the 138-kilometre, two-lane Htee Khee road to link the Dawei Special Economic Zone with Thailand in 2018. It runs through the vast forests of the Dawna Tenasserim Landscape, which spans the mountains on the Thai-Myanmar border.

    The DTL is one of the most intact natural landscapes in the entire Greater Mekong region and a stronghold for tigers, elephants, and other endangered wildlife. This forest ecosystem provides freshwater for the area and is critical for mitigating climate change. It is home to 168 species of mammal, 568 species of bird, and thousands of reptile, amphibian, insect, fish and plant species, the WWF said.

    “The road would bring economic growth to Tanintharyi. However, we are not looking at the cost to forest and wildlife. Just as people need roads, nature needs wild highways allowing species to move,” said Nick Cox, conservation director of WWF-Myanmar.

    Needing wild highways is one of several issues ignored by the project, he added.

    Following the Dawei SEZ Memorandum of Intent signed by Myanmar, Thailand and Japan in 2015, Italian-Thailand Development (ITD) signed an agreement with the government to build the two-lane road. In May 2018, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Conservation approved the environmental and social impact assessment (ESIA) with some comments.

    However, the assessment is inadequate in mitigating any impact on biodiversity because it fails to address key challenges, such as the loss of habitat connectivity for threatened species, and an increase in deforestation and illegal hunting, the WWF said.

    For example, the impact on forests and wildlife identified in the assessment include increases in vehicle pollution, vehicle-wildlife accidents, and deterioration of habitat, but it lacks a comprehensive assessment of the impact of increased traffic and vehicle speeds on wildlife.

    It also lacks a plan to construct wildlife crossings, protect the wildlife corridor, and set up monitoring. “What is especially concerning is that the ESIA fails to acknowledge the rich biodiversity of the DTL, and even states that wildlife will be forced to move out of the area due to disturbances from the road, while proposing insufficient measures for mitigating this impact,” the WWF said.

    “The reforestation plan is also insufficient. There are many missing elements to the ESIA, and more comprehensive mitigation measures need to be taken to ensure the protection of the forests and wildlife in the DTL from the effects of the road project.”

    Cont. Below...

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    1. The WWF found vulnerable species such as tigers, clouded leopards, leopards, Asian elephants, guar, Asian tapirs, sambar deer, sun bears, Asiatic black bears, and white-handed gibbons along the Dawei road.

      It recommended that the government construct dedicated wildlife underpasses or overpasses along the main wildlife corridor from Myitta to Sin Phyu Daing. The crossings must also have fences to guide wildlife to the designated areas. These have been proven to work on similar projects in Thailand.

      Also needed are signs to prevent wildlife poaching and illegal hunting, warning signs for road users, and speed reductions at night to prevent fatal accidents for people and wildlife.

      The report says that the area between Myitta and Sin Phyu Daing is also vulnerable to soil erosion and landslides, particularly if forests are cleared, so protecting the forests and restoring these areas will lower the risk of damage to the road as well as protect wildlife habitat.

      Since it is highly likely that this road will be upgraded to a four-lane highway in the future, it is imperative that this expansion be part of the planning from the start, in order to ensure that environmental impact, avoidance, and effective mitigation are taken into account. “The experience of other countries shows that this is the most cost-effective and environmentally sound approach,” the WWF said.

      It also urged that the relevant government ministries and the ITD put in place a comprehensive and fully-funded reforestation and habitat restoration plan that will offset the effects on forests of the construction and upgrading of the road.

      - Myanmar Times
      - https://www.mmtimes.com/news/dawei-road-project-poses-risks-threatened-species-wwf.html

      Delete
  29. Military Nets 16-Billion-Kyat Drug Haul in Northern Shan State

    By Lawi Weng on 1 August 2019

    The Myanmar military (or Tatmadaw) recently seized a large amount of illegal drugs—and the ingredients and equipment used to produce them—from among 96 camps in Kutkai Township, in northern Shan State, according to the military.

    On July 29, the Tatmadaw reported the seizure of 16-billion-kyats ($10.6 million) worth of goods in 96 small jungle camps on the east side of Kutkai Township, the largest such seizure this year.

    On July 21, the Tatmadaw arrested two people in Muse in connection to a warehouse that was found to be storing a large amount of drugs, according to a report published on the website of the Office of the Commander-in-Chief.

    Information gleaned from interrogations with the two arrestees led the Tatmadaw to nearby production sites, it said.

    Police and Tatmadaw forces then jointly made the seizures between July 25 and July 28, in production sites about 3,000 meters (1.8 miles) from the village of Shout Haw, according to the report.

    Locals and TNLA officials described Shout Haw to The Irrawaddy as a Chinese village in the southeastern portion of the jungle. The Tatmadaw report said structures there included both residential huts and huts used solely for drug production.

    “While they [the military] went to … the area, they found those illegal drugs and chemicals,” Police Major General Zaw Khin Aung told The Irrawaddy.

    The haul included 9,000 amphetamine pills and 790 kilograms of crystal methamphetamine, also known as ice, alongside scores of equipment and raw materials used in the production of illegal drugs, according to the report. The entire haul will be handed over to police for processing, it said.

    Zaw Khin Aung said no arrests were made during the seizures, and he does not know whether or not the military will open charges against anyone.

    It isn’t the first time the Kutkai area—which has seen active and ongoing fighting between the Tatmadaw and several ethnic armed organizations, including the Kachin Independence Army, the Ta’aung National Liberation Army (TNLA) and the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army—has seen drug busts like this. Some of the drug production—which the fighting makes difficult to police—is used to fund the fighting itself.

    TNLA Brigadier General Tar Phone Kyaw told The Irrawaddy that Shout Haw Village is under the control of a local militia, adding that the area is known to be the site of large-scale drug production.

    “There are even more drug factories on their bases,” he said.

    - The Irrawaddy
    - https://www.irrawaddy.com/news/burma/military-nets-16-billion-kyat-drug-haul-northern-shan-state.html

    ReplyDelete
  30. Investigators Team Up to Battle Cross-Border Financial Crime

    01 August 2019 by Michael Breslin
    Appears In August 2019 Print Issue

    Today’s modern criminals have evolved with the times, adapting to advances in technology at a far quicker pace than both policy makers and law enforcement agencies. Organized groups, gangs, and other criminals have applied principles of risk management to their illicit tradecraft.

    The FBI reports that there were 4,251 bank robberies in 2016—a 45 percent decrease compared to 2004. Criminals realize there is more money to be made with less risk of violence, arrest, and imprisonment by leveraging technology to further their criminal enterprises and schemes. Why rob a bank—risking physical harm and stiff penalties—when you can engage in identity theft or identity fiction and rob banks, financial institutions, and credit card companies with little fear of exposure? There is greater potential reward with decreased risk.

    In 2013, criminals working with computer experts in more than 20 countries stole $45 million from thousands of automated teller machines over a 10-hour period. This figure represented more than the total losses from the physical robberies of banks that year.

    Advancement in technology enables progress, accelerates global commerce, and improves our daily lives. However, it also facilitates faster, more anony-mous criminal activity. Financial crimes have become increasingly sophisticated and dispersed among transnational criminal organizations (TCOs), which have reinvented themselves by leveraging ubiquitous technology and exploiting the gaps inherent in open societies and the global economy. Their influence is damaging, widespread, and formidable.

    TCOs are made up of individuals, groups, and associations that operate via illegal means, primarily motivated by desire for increased wealth and power. Their influence usually extends beyond physical or national borders and is facilitated by weak barriers to technology.

    Former U.S. President Barack Obama classified and defined significant TCOs as posing a hazard to U.S. national security because some of these groups have the reach and scope to “threaten the stability of international political and economic systems,” according to an executive order.

    TCOs pose a greater challenge to law enforcement than single bad actors for a variety of reasons, including their ability to form along racial and ethnic lines to exclude or collaborate with others.

    TCOs follow different pathways to success, but all share one common theme: The governments of these organizations’ countries of origin are often unwilling or unable to deter these criminal enterprises.

    One example of inefficient government action is Armenia. Armenia’s past political turmoil led to an increasing amount of centralized, organized crime in the country.

    Cont. Below...

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    1. This structure of Armenian organized crime is described as a “basic system of relationships and access among various sectors of society.” Unlike other criminal enterprises, there is no “head of the organization.” This makes dismantling Armenian organized crime incredibly difficult. For example, in 2010, the Mirzoyan-Terdjanian Organization (an Armenian-American organization) began to commit medical fraud in five states using stolen identities to cheat the complex Medicare system. The group funneled the money made in the United States into bank accounts in Armenia. The members traveled to and from Armenia to plan and orchestrate this scheme. There were 70 total members of this organization, but no leader. They were eventually caught in the United States and charged with multiple felonies, including money laundering in Armenia.

      Due to the rapidity of globalization, increased technology, and the ability to adapt to ever-changing political, environmental, and technological conditions, TCOs are better able to leverage their power and influence to spread illicit activities around a set location or across the globe faster and with greater adverse impact.

      Another crucial element that allows TCOs to be successful is anonymity. This is especially true for cybercrimes or crimes where transactions or communications are online. By using the Internet, TCOs can communicate rapidly and anonymously. They can also communicate almost anywhere, making it difficult to identify members of these organizations.

      Many times, members of these organizations are unaware of the true identities of the people they work with. These types of TCOs are prevalent in Eastern European countries that used to be part of the Soviet Bloc. One example involves credit card fraud or identity fraud. Low-level operators in these organizations steal credit card information through hacking, phishing, or card skimming. Once the data is retrieved, another group encodes the information onto separate cards and sells them online. These transactions are hard to track through the Internet and the Dark Web. The key point here is that the leaders of the organization can put maximum distance between themselves and the physical place where the crimes are being committed.

      Given TCOs’ large numbers of followers, low cost, and widespread access to advanced technology, as well as the nature of transnational crime itself and TCOs’ willingness to use any means to further their cause, these insular groups prove especially challenging to catch and prosecute. And they are using their resources to target financial institutions.

      The common underlying factor and motivation for most financial crimes is simple: greed. According to Verizon’s 2019 Data Breach Investigations Report, 71 percent of data breaches were financially motivated, and 39 percent of breaches were conducted by organized criminal groups.

      Cybercrime has a direct impact on the public’s trust in institutions and the ability of the public and private sectors to safeguard assets and vital interests. In 2016, the economic costs resulting from cybercrime and attacks ranged between an estimated $57 billion and $109 billion. Just as important is the potential damage caused by these attacks across their targets and linked firms, thereby creating a spillover effect and extending economic harm.

      Cont. Below...

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    2. Stock prices drop when a company experiences a significant cyberattack or data breach. The 7 September 2017 announcement by Equifax of the massive cybersecurity breach compromising as many as 147 million Americans caused its stock price to drop by more than 34 percent. The company also incurred more than $300 million in expenses related to the breach. Credit card issuing companies such as TransUnion and Experian, both associated with Equifax, also felt the negative spillover effect of the linkage. Market reaction was negative in the aftermath of the breach and executives from both companies were urged to testify before Congress—thus opening the business up to public scrutiny and additional regulation.

      Common traits prevalent among today’s financial criminal organizations are sophistication and resiliency. Criminals continuously adapt to changes in technology and advances made by law enforcement to mitigate their illicit activities. The agility of TCOs’ technological transformation is a seemingly insurmountable obstacle for law enforcement.

      However, transnational cyber criminals are not beyond the reach of law enforcement. International law enforcement operations require more time and resources than domestic operations. But even if law enforcement cannot immediately apprehend cyber criminals, it is able to disrupt their operations by targeting their associates, infiltrating criminal infrastructure, and sharing information with companies to enable them to protect their systems.

      INVESTIGATIONS

      Organizations around the world handle cybercrime investigations differently, with varying levels of partnership and international cooperation. Within the United States, the Secret Service has been investigating cybercrime since Congress enacted the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984. As payment methods have changed over the years—from coin and paper currency to checks, credit cards, and online transactions—the scope of the Service’s financial investigations has expanded.

      In fiscal year 2018, financial crime investigations resulted in 970 arrests worldwide and prevented more than $400 million in potential losses and $312 million in actual losses to the financial system.

      To combat these crimes, the Secret Service takes a proactive approach, using advanced technologies to capitalize on the power of task force partnerships. Today, computer experts, forensic specialists, investigative experts, and intelligence analysts provide rapid response and critical information in support of financial analysis, infrastructure protection, and criminal investigations.

      These task force partnerships consist of members from the public and private sectors, including academia. Each organization leverages its skill sets and agency resources towards a common goal—to investigate, apprehend, and impede the criminal activity of these organizations. These task forces meet regularly, share information, and cross-train with each other at various conferences and workshops geared towards professional development and sharing of best practices. Using the task force model enables law enforcement to rely on a very powerful tool—the ability to reach back across many disciplines and jurisdictions for investigative assistance.

      Secret Service investigations have resulted in the arrest and prosecution of cyber criminals involved in the largest known data breaches, including those of NASDAQ, Dow Jones, Euronet, TJ Maxx, and Heartland Payment Systems. Between 2013 and 2018, Secret Service cybercrime investigations resulted in more than 2,122 arrests, associated with approximately $3 billion in cybercrime fraud losses and the prevention of more than $9.8 billion in potential cybercrime fraud losses. Through work with partners at the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), local U.S. Attorney’s Offices, and the Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section (CCIPS), the Secret Service continues to bring major cyber criminals to justice.

      ​Cont. Below...

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    3. PARTNERSHIPS

      The Secret Service has a network of international offices and partners closely tied with foreign and domestic law enforcement to counter transnational crime, including with INTERPOL, the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces Fusion Center, and European Cybercrimes Center (EC3).

      The Secret Service working groups reflect broader, multilateral efforts, such as partnering with the Dutch and Wiesbaden Working Groups to combat the growth of transnational organized crime in Eastern Europe.

      On a rotating basis, the Secret Service provides these working groups with special agents who possess unique cyber capabilities. These temporary assignments allow for the development of meaningful and long-term relationships with essential foreign partners. The one-on-one communication and trust earned reaps benefits when information or assistance is needed in a timely fashion. The best time to meet your foreign counterpart is not the first time you need something from them.

      These trusted partnerships enable the Secret Service to target transnational suspects involved in the distribution and operation of counterfeit U.S. currency, botnets, criminal networks offering bulletproof hosting and the sale of malicious software, and the large-scale theft of personally identifiable information (PII).

      The U.S. government has displayed its commitment to combating TCOs through various instruments of its national power, namely via diplomatic channels and by leveraging existing international relationships and creating new ones to help build the capacity and collaboration needed for long-term sustainable progress against these criminal enterprises.

      An example of this collaborative information-sharing approach is the Five Eyes intelligence network (comprising Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States), one of the strongest intelligence alliances in the world. There are a few reasons why only these five countries are in the network: they all have similar intelligence gathering strategies, they all agree on relatively the same techniques and laws in gathering intelligence, and they have the same standards of intelligence quality.

      The use of effective partnering and information sharing with foreign law enforcement enables the United States to better combat the illicit activities of TCOs. American law enforcement agencies have arrested and extradited transnational criminals responsible for hundreds of millions of dollars in financial losses to U.S. businesses and consumers.

      The private sector has joined the fight in a substantial way through the creation of sector-based Information Sharing and Analysis Centers (ISACs). These centers collect, analyze, and disseminate relevant and timely information required to secure critical infrastructure, including financial institutions. The information is shared among private-sector stakeholders and with government officials.

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    4. TASK FORCES

      An effective tool to combat the impact of transnational crime that targets payment systems and financial infrastructure is the Secret Service’s development and use of the Electronic Crimes Task Force (ECTF) model.

      ECTFs create a framework for international law enforcement agencies to share expertise and resources to combat electronic crimes such as identity theft, network intrusions, and a range of financial crimes. The Secret Service maintains a network of 40 ECTFs, including 38 domestic task forces and two international task forces in London and Rome. Participants in ECTFs include approximately 500 academic collaborators; more than 2,500 international, federal, state, and local law enforcement investigators; and more than 4,000 private-sector partners.

      In fiscal year 2018, ECTFs’ investigations resulted in computer forensic examinations totaling in excess of 726 terabytes of information.

      Additionally, agents assigned to the network intrusion program responded to approximately 271 suspected incidents of malicious cyberactivity nationwide. The program identifies, mitigates, and facilitates the remediation of network intrusions, unauthorized access, malicious hacking, and other network-based crimes.

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    5. TRAINING

      To protect financial infrastructure from criminals, the Secret Service has adopted a multipronged approach that includes providing computer-based training to enhance the investigative skills of special agents through the Electronic Crimes Special Agent Program; establishing a Computer Emergency Response Team in coordination with Carnegie Mellon University; maximizing partnerships with international law enforcement counterparts through overseas field offices; collaborating through an established network of ECTFs; and providing computer-based training to state and local law enforcement partners to enhance their investigative skills at the National Computer Forensics Institute (NCFI) in Hoover, Alabama.

      The NCFI is the only federally funded training center in the United States dedicated to instructing state and local officials in digital evidence and cybercrime investigations. The institute opened in 2008 with a mandate to provide state and local law enforcement, legal, and judicial professionals with a free, comprehensive education on current cybercrime trends, investigative methods, and prosecutorial challenges.

      NCFI students receive the same equipment and software as Secret Service special agents, which allows both the local officer and the federal agent to operate on common systems. Graduates of the NCFI return to their respective agencies and apply their newly acquired skills and equipment to investigating computer-based crimes. Additionally, these graduates are offered the chance to participate in the Secret Service’s ECTF Program.

      Since its inception, NCFI has trained more than 6,700 state and local officials, prosecutors, and judges on current cybercrime trends, investigative methods, and prosecutorial challenges. This training allowed forensic investigative partners to conduct more than 46,900 computer forensic exams and analyze approximately 4,500 terabytes of information.

      Combating TCOs remains a major challenge for law enforcement for a variety of reasons. TCOs are founded for economic rather than political purposes. Therefore, as an organization, a TCO’s lifeblood is profit. At first glance, a TCO does not always appear as great a risk or threat to government as traditional terrorist groups. Crime is often viewed through the lens of being solely a domestic problem. Local law enforcement is often tasked with stemming the TCO’s influence instead of viewing the TCO as a threat to national security, therefore incorporating the capacity and capability of both law enforcement and national security organizational structures, as well as their respective approaches and legal frameworks.

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    6. Although the tactics and victims of TCOs may vary, their economic impact remains devastatingly consistent. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) estimates the financial gain of TCOs to be approximately $870 billion yearly.

      Law enforcement, government officials, and private sector agencies have a vital role to play in the safeguarding of the public good; however, the role of the individual in this joint effort cannot be understated. Public awareness is extremely important in this endeavor. According to the Verizon Data Breach Investigations Report, cyberattacks are largely opportunistic and will target large or small organizations, succeeding most when the target is unprepared.

      UNODC has launched various campaigns to educate the public on the global impact of TCOs, ranging from efforts against human trafficking, smuggling of migrants, organized crime, and counterfeiting. One familiar, yet effective, mantra is the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s “If you see something, say something.” That phrase covers all types of suspicious activity from sneaking into a facility to unusual transactions on financial accounts.

      The biggest challenge when facing transnational crime organizations is interagency and international cooperation. Many of these TCOs originate in poor countries where governments lack the skills and resources to stop advanced crime networks. When these TCOs start operating in the United States, they become even harder to combat.

      Public engagement with law enforcement cannot be understated or undervalued when addressing this challenge. The public must see the value in joining law enforcement in this effort in ways that are safe yet relevant. Information channels must be created and maintained with the safety of the citizen in mind to foster a level of trust necessary for the public to provide timely and relevant information and investigative leads to law enforcement officials.

      The evolution of financial crime and the increased sophistication of cyber criminals and transnational criminal organizations have placed high demand and pressure on law enforcement to adequately track these criminals and deter such activity.

      Advances in information technology, the adaptation of cyber criminals, and the transnational nature of payment systems, banking, and the global marketplace require a strategic approach to combating this complex problem of ever-evolving TCOs.

      ​Michael Breslin serves as the director of strategic client relationships, federal law enforcement, for LexisNexis Risk Solutions. He is a retired federal law enforcement senior executive with 24 years of law enforcement and homeland security experience. He served as the deputy assistant director, U.S. Secret Service Office of Investigations, with oversight of 162 domestic and foreign field offices.

      - Security Management (SM)
      - https://sm.asisonline.org/Pages/International-Investigators-Team-Up-to-Battle-Cross-Border-Financial-Crime-.aspx

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  31. WHY FACIAL RECOGNITION WILL CREATE A MAJOR IMPACT ON SECURITY SURVEILLANCE

    By Pratik Kirve July 29, 2019

    Facial recognition is an advanced biometric technology that is used for identification and authentication of any individual. This technology compares the facial features captured from an image with the stored facial database. The technology is widely preferred over the rest of the biometric technologies such as voice recognition, iris recognition, skin texture recognition, and fingerprint scanning. The main reason behind this preference of choice is that facial technologies is a non-contact process and can be easily deployed by using the existing monitoring devices and cameras. Moreover, facial recognition technology is best suited for marketing and security purposes.

    The basic requirements for a perfect facial recognition software are convenient & frictionless, greater accuracy, automation, smarter integration, and better security. Security and surveillance greatly depend on facial recognition technology to combat terrorism and crime. This technology can also be used for issuing identity documents and the data can be integrated with other biometric technologies such as iris recognition and fingerprints. Integrating the drones with aerial cameras greatly helps the authority to monitor the mass events.

    Facial technology has also tremendously helped the health sector. This technology is used in tracking the patient’s use of medication more accurately and efficiently. Moreover, it can be used for detecting genetic diseases if the database is filled with adequate information. Sometimes it is used for supporting the pain management procedures too. There are various challenges faced by the healthcare professionals and facial recognition technology can help them out.

    The primary duty of the facial recognition technology would be to secure the hospital facilities. By scanning every one entering the hospital, law officials can easily identify an individual and add it to their database. Another valuable application of facial recognition is its real-time emotion detection. This application can be used in order to collect and analyze the data of the emotions a patient exhibit. This analysis can be helpful in determining where more attention is needed in different sections of the hospital.

    Cont. Below...

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  32. Healthcare professionals sometimes takes a huge chunk out of the patient’s pockets. Hence there are many individuals who pose as patients in order to gain access to free treatments and medications. In order to curb these practices, facial recognition can be very helpful. Furthermore, the technology can be used to analyze the traffic pattern.

    A healthcare organization can optimize the overall statistics of the visitors by detecting the pattern based on gender and age. It can be helpful for tracking the patients without the use of any physical tracking devices. It would be a piece of cake to determine whether the patients are inside the nursing home or in outpatient assisted living facilities.

    This technology can also be used for marketing and retail purposes. The shop owners and retailers can use this technology in order to analyze the behavioral patterns of the customers and enhance the process of purchasing. These behavioral patterns help in gaining insights on the items that the customers are most interested in. It is now possible to determine the age and gender of the customer by integrating facial recognition with artificial intelligence (AI).

    The sales of mobile phones have rocketed post integration with facial recognition technology. The technology has become the new marketing tool in order to gain more customers. The face ID technology also enables a variety of peripheral functions. This would include detailed animojis, that would offer you emojis with your actual facial expression along with an impressive degree of accuracy.

    Social media platforms have adopted this new technology to increase the number of users for their platforms. They would use this technology in order to diversify the user’s functionalities which will attract more user base. The social network has become a lifestyle and it would be very useful if personal identity can be integrated with social networking. Recently, this new idea has been proposed for integrating cloud computing services with mobile devices.

    The system can be easily designed and developed in the form of an application on the Android mobile devices platform. It will utilize the Face.com API for rendering image data for cloud computing services. After testing, the system could recognize around 85% of the face sample and took around 7.45 second for computing the data. It would only take as less as 1.03 seconds to get someone’s information through augmented reality translation.

    Several enterprises and corporation have invested in facial recognition as its benefits far exceed its drawbacks. After exhaustive research, Allied Market Research has estimated that the global facial recognition market would garner $9.6 billion by 2022, growing exponentially at a CAGR of 21.3% from 2016 to 2022. The market of facial recognition has great potential and will increase at a steady pace as new technologies and innovative products are introduced in this market.

    - Irish Tech News
    - https://irishtechnews.ie/why-facial-recognition-will-create-a-major-impact-on-security-surveillance/

    ReplyDelete
  33. Human traffickers leave 6 Rohingya starving in abandoned building in Hat Yai

    The Thaiger

    Published on July 30, 2019By The Thaiger

    Six Rohingya were left to die in an abandoned building located in Hat Yai, Songkhla. Members of the group eventaully left the building in search of food and officials are now searching for more hiding in the area. They had been waiting there for 5 days. Thai Police were notified by nearby villagers yesterday trying to assist the victims of the human trafficking gangs in southern Thailand.

    They told police that a total of 37 Rohingya victims were smuggled into Thailand by human trafficking agents. Thailand is often used as a passageway from the Burmese as they travel, principally, to Malaysia.

    Out of the 6, there was 1 woman and the rest were men. They came out of hiding in starvation asking villagers around the area for food to eat in Tha Chang, Bang Klam Districts.

    An agent had left them in the abandoned building The Rohingya have been starving for 5 days. The villagers said they felt extremely sorry for them and decided to notify the officials.

    The agents told them that they had to hide from officials and couldn’t continue their journey.

    Police General Suchart Theerasawat from the Children Women Families Protection and Anti Human Trafficking Centre ordered a search for the rest of the Rohingya victims. Locals in the area were advised to notify officials if any Rohingya are spotted as their health is at serious risk.

    - Workpoint News
    - The Thaiger
    - https://thethaiger.com/hot-news/crime/human-traffickers-leave-6-rohingya-starving-in-abandoned-building-in-hat-yai

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  34. Singapore aims for paper-less border arrival by 2021

    The Thaiger, Published on August 21, 2019

    Singapore is extending its SG Arrival Card trial that will allow visitors to submit an electronic arrival card in advance to speed up processing at border checkpoints

    The Immigration & Checkpoints Authority has announced the beta trial of the SG Arrival Card project last week. The trial has been ongoing since last year and will phase out the paper arrivals card for a more efficient e-arrival process. The plan is to phase out the paper arrival system by 2021 by eventually extending the electronic arrival card system to all travellers.

    The announcement says foreign visitors travelling with “selected transport operators” can now submit the electronic arrival card up to 14 days ahead of their arrival in Singapore. Singapore’s Today news service identified the selected transport operators that are participating in the beta trial version.

    Airlines
    AirAsia, Jetstar Asia, Cathay Pacific and Singapore Airlines

    Bus
    Transtar Travel

    Ferries
    BatamFast Ferries, Bintan Resort Ferries, Horizon Fast Ferry and Majestic Fast Ferry

    This means that they will only need to produce their passports for immigration clearance upon arrival, as ICA’s immigration system will already have the electronic arrival cards, which they submitted in advance.

    The SG Arrival Card e-Service and Mobile Application is available as an e-Service at the ICA’s website HERE.

    It can also be downloaded as a free mobile application from Apple App Store and Google Play.

    Users of the mobile application will have the option of scanning their passport biodata pages and enjoy the convenience of not needing to key in the information manually. The mobile application will also save previously submitted information for use on subsequent trips to Singapore.

    - ICA and Today
    -The Thaiger
    - https://thethaiger.com/news/regional/singapore/singapore-aims-for-paper-less-border-arrival-by-2021

    ReplyDelete
  35. MILITARY DRONES AND SURVEILLANCE PLANES REMAIN AN OPTION FOR U.S.-MEXICO BORDER, DOCUMENTS SHOW

    BY James Laporta on 8/23/19

    Pentagon officials are open to the idea of deploying reconnaissance planes and drones built for war to the U.S.-Mexico border, according to a new cache of documents obtained by Newsweek. But the support needed for such operations is "still in the staffing process."

    Operation Guardian Support documents created by U.S. Northern Command in late July and as recent as last Monday show Defense Department planners still mulling over sending surveillance aircraft and unmanned aerial systems, known colloquially as drones, per the approved U.S. Customs and Border Protection request then-Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan signed off on back in May.

    Military planners crafting the operational orders dated for July 26 show that U.S. Army North, which oversees the military support to U.S. Customs and Border Protection, was slated to receive airplanes designed for reconnaissance and intelligence gathering, along with U.S. military drones, according to the documents.

    In another document created last week on August 12, military planners indicated they were going to delete the entry that would have sent drones and fixed-wing surveillance aircraft to the border.

    However, another paragraph from the same document seems to suggest that sending U.S. military drones to the U.S.-Mexico border is not off the table.

    The passage labeled, "3.C.12.B.1.," is scheduled to be changed but shows that the 1st Air Cavalry Brigade, a U.S. Army aviation unit out of Fort Hood, Texas and currently assigned to the border mission, was scheduled to receive helicopters and drones. Newsweek was unable to determine what changed in line 3.C.12.B.1.

    "As for the aviation support request, at this time, there are six H-60s assigned to this request. There are no UAS [unmanned aerial systems] currently assigned to support this request. Department of Defense airborne detection and monitoring support is currently still in the staffing process," Defense Department spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Christian Mitchell told Newsweek last week on Thursday via email.

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    1. It's not clear why the airborne detection and monitoring support has not been staffed, given that the gap was identified earlier this year.

      In June, Newsweek reported on exclusive documents obtained from the Departments of Defense and Homeland Security that showed Shanahan approved a request for additional assistance to U.S. Customs and Border Protection on the southwest border and directed the joint chiefs of staff to backfill a void in troops and aircraft at the U.S.-Mexico border.

      The shortage of personnel and military hardware was created in February when Democratic state governors pulled their National Guard troops from the border in a sharp rebuke of President Donald Trump's rhetoric about undocumented migrants posing a national security risk to the United States.

      Earlier this month, Newsweek reported on additional obtained documents pertaining to the personnel and aircraft shortfall. The slides created by U.S. Northern Command showed a cluster of potential drones that could be tasked to the U.S.-Mexico border. Among some of the drones the Defense Department identified the MQ-9 Reaper and the ScanEagle—aircraft that see continual use in both Afghanistan and Yemen.

      Pentagon officials considered providing U.S. Customs and Border Protection with four MQ-1 Predator drones. The Border Patrol's aviation wing has operated a version of the MQ-9 Reaper, known as the Predator B, since at least fiscal year 2006.

      The Pentagon told Newsweek in the same report it had decided to deploy 1000 troops and six UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters to the U.S.-Mexico border to backfill the void in personnel left by the National Guard troops in February.

      "As of today, there are approximately 3,000 active duty service members supporting Customs and Border Protection along the Southwest border," Mitchell told Newsweek last Thursday via email. "This includes about 600 Marines and 2,400 Soldiers. Marines from 1st Battalion, 4th Marines are replacing the Marines from MWSG-37 who are currently assigned to the southwest border support mission."

      "This transition is part of routine troop rotations in support of the Department of Homeland Security. For operational security reasons, we do not comment on specific dates or specific command relationships," added Mitchell.

      The operational order dated for August 12 lists the units rotating down to the U.S.-Mexico border and what U.S. military installations are slated to support both U.S. troops and personnel from U.S. Customs and Border Protection through the end of the current fiscal year. The new units assumed responsibility for their assigned areas along the southwest border this past weekend on Sunday.

      Pentagon sources, who asked not to be named, provided the pages to Newsweek because they felt Defense Department transparency about the U.S. military deployments to the southwest border had eroded, they said.

      The documents are unclassified, but for official use only. U.S. Army North commander Lieutenant General Laura J. Richardson authenticated the operational orders dated for July 26 and August 12, according to the documents.

      - Newsweek
      - https://www.newsweek.com/military-drones-surveillance-planes-remain-option-us-mexico-border-documents-show-1455941

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  36. RAF’s new drone to battle terrorists: killing machine which can be entirely operated from the UK

    By Dominic Nicholls, defence and security correspondent, on 21 August 2019

    Britain’s new armed surveillance drones, called Protector, will be able to fly for up to 40 hours, over double the time of the current Reaper aircraft, and strike terrorists with precision missiles and laser-guided bombs.

    New “game-changing technology” means that the Protector Remotely Piloted Air System (RPAS) is capable of taxiing, taking off and landing anywhere in the world controlled via satellite link from a remote base. With special anti-icing and lightning protection, the Protector will be able to conduct missions in adverse weather conditions.

    It means that in future RAF pilots will be able to attack targets anywhere around the world from their home base in Waddington, Lincolnshire, without having to deploy ground crews.

    Up to now, drones have needed ground control stations at the airbase they fly from and land at, and have not been certified to fly in regulated airspace alongside civilian air traffic.

    The MoD announced that the first Protector flew from Yuma in Arizona to Creech Air Force Base in Nevada, from where the RAF’s 39 Squadron has been flying missions in Afghanistan and elsewhere since 2007 using the current Reaper drones.

    RAF personnel from 39 and 54 Squadrons gathered at the base for their first opportunity to see up close the aircraft they will soon be operating.

    Air Vice-Marshal Harv Smyth, commander of the RAF’s intelligence and surveillance forces, was impressed with the minimal after-flight attention the aircraft required.

    “After an hour, with only two people plus a laptop, it was turned around, restarted, taxied out and took off, en route back to Yuma. Brilliant expeditionary RPAS capability” he said on Twitter.

    Speaking from the hangar in Nevada, he said: “When we talk about next-generation Air Force one of the capabilities that we’re delivering is most definitely Protector.

    “This idea that we’ll have an RPAS that can operate anywhere at any time in controlled airspace alongside airliners is an absolutely game-changing capability.”

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    1. Built by US company General Atomics and due to enter service in 2024, the Protector will be operated by a crew of three, comprising a Pilot, a Sensor Operator and a Mission Intelligence Coordinator.

      It will carry up to 18 Brimstone missiles, which have been used to attack moving targets such as armoured vehicles or terrorists on motorbikes, as well as Paveway IV laser-guided bombs, spread across nine weapons points on the aircraft.

      As the 38ft long aircraft will be certified to fly in European airspace, they could potentially be used in Nato intelligence-gathering missions in eastern Europe, or even over the UK and its waters and with a 50 per cent payload increase over Reaper, it can carry an even more deadly mix of sensors and weapons.

      Britain has committed to buying 16 Protectors, with a possible further 10 to follow. They will replace the existing fleet of 10 Reaper aircraft which were bought as urgent requirements for operations in Afghanistan.

      Like the Reapers, the Protectors will be flown by 13 Squadron (motto: ‘We assist by watching’) based at RAF Waddington and 39 Squadron from the Creech Air Force Base in Nevada.

      All aircraft will eventually be based at RAF Waddington, with a planned investment of £93 million to construct a new purpose-built hanger as well new facilities and accommodation for crews.

      Wing Commander Colin Welsh, Officer Commanding 39 Squadron (motto: ‘By day and night’) said: “It takes everything that’s great about Reaper and adds a whole bundle of capabilities.”

      The Protector programme, thought to cost in the region of £1 billion, is two years late as the MoD has had to reorganise and stretch the spending, due to sterling weakening against the dollar.

      “The exchange rate in 2015 is not what it is now,” said Tim Ripley, of Jane’s Defence Weekly.

      Mr Ripley said the Protector programme is hugely innovative and that the RAF is breaking new ground in RPAS technology.

      “It offers a truly global power projection capability,” he told the Telegraph.

      “Not even the US have the ability to take-off and land drones controlled via satellite from another ground station.

      “They have never needed to develop that technology as Uncle Sam has a global network of bases.”

      An RAF spokesman said: “UK RPAS aircraft are controlled by highly trained RAF pilots who adhere strictly to the same laws of armed conflict and rules of engagement as traditionally manned RAF aircraft.

      “Our RPAS do not have the capability to employ weapons autonomously, our pilots always make the decision when and where to employ and release weapons.”

      The announcement comes as Pentagon officials confirmed that a US Reaper drone was shot down over Yemen on Tuesday night. A statement from US Central Command said: “We are aware of reports that a US MQ-9 [Reaper] was shot down over Yemen. We do not have any further information to provide at this time”.

      Reuters reported a spokesman for the Houthi regime had said the drone was brought down by a surface to air missile south-east of the capital Sanaa.

      – the Telegraph
      – https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2019/08/21/rafs-new-drone-battle-against-terrorists-automated-killing-machine/

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  37. Drone Likely for Security Surveillance

    Published on: Thursday, August 08, 2019

    Kota Kinabalu: THE State Government is considering using drones for security surveillance in the State’s waters, especially in the East Coast.

    Chief Minister Datuk Seri Mohd Shafie Apdal said the use of drones is the latest approach to monitor the traffic flow of boats on Sabah’s waters without using aircraft.

    “Drone is a good system and is one of the initiatives that the government is working on,” he said during question and answer at the State Legislative Assembly sitting, here, Wednesday.

    He also said the government would also intensify the use of radar surveillance in the East Coast.

    “The State’s borders are wide. As such, it is not easy if we monitor them by relying on the placement of security personnel along the borders.”

    Earlier, Shafie said the proposal to move Lok Kawi army camp from Kota Kinabalu to the east coast is to ensure better security surveillance and protection of the country’s sovereignty.

    “Currently, the Lok Kawi camp has been turned into the fifth headquarters of the Infantry Division which means the army’s capabilities in the State has been elevated to Division level.

    “At the same time, the previously-placed fifth brigade headquarters has been relocated to Kem Paradise in Kota Belud.

    “To ensure the safety of the East Coast is well-maintained, a new brigade (13th Brigade Cendrawasih) has been established and placed at Lahad Datu.

    “The army’s strength has also been enhanced with the establishment of a battalion of the Border Regiment in San Shui, Tawau,” he said.

    However, due to the frequent occurrence of cross-border crime and security threats in hot spots in the East Coast, the State Government has proposed to the Federal Government to relocate Lok Kawi camp to the East Coast.

    “The government has always put priority on efforts to improve the national security by increasing the security asset based on current needs.

    “For example, enhancing the capabilities of the surveillance equipment and sensors apart from streamlining the security procedures in the Eastern Sabah Security Zone (Esszone).

    “The government also proposed to place an air force base in the Esszone. These measures are taken to ensure cross-border crime activities can be easily monitored and handled effectively.”

    However, he said, the additional security assets will depend on the approved allocation.

    “To strengthen the security monitoring of the area, the government is conducting a study to re-structure the role and functions of the Eastern Sabah Security Command (Esscom),” he said. – Ricardo Unto

    - Daily Express
    - http://www.dailyexpress.com.my/news/138959/drones-likely-for-security-surveillance/

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  38. The US Border Patrol and an Israeli Military Contractor are Putting a Native American Reservation Under “Persistent Surveillance”

    By Will Parrish on August 25, 2019

    ON THE SOUTHWESTERN END of the Tohono O’odham Nation’s reservation, roughly 1 mile from a barbed-wire barricade marking Arizona’s border with the Mexican state of Sonora, Ofelia Rivas leads me to the base of a hill overlooking her home.

    A U.S. Border Patrol truck is parked roughly 200 yards upslope.

    A small black mast-mounted with cameras and sensors is positioned on a trailer hitched to the truck. For Rivas, the Border Patrol’s monitoring of the reservation has been a grim aspect of everyday life.

    And that surveillance is about to become far more intrusive.

    The vehicle is parked where U.S. Customs and Border Protection will soon construct a 160-foot surveillance tower capable of continuously monitoring every person and vehicle within a radius of up to 7.5 miles.

    The tower will be outfitted with high-definition cameras with night vision, thermal sensors, and ground-sweeping radar, all of which will feed real-time data to Border Patrol agents at a central operating station in Ajo, Arizona.

    The system will store an archive with the ability to rewind and track individuals’ movements across time — an ability known as “wide-area persistent surveillance.”

    CBP plans 10 of these towers across the Tohono O’odham reservation, which spans an area roughly the size of Connecticut.

    Two will be located near residential areas, including Rivas’s neighbourhood, which is home to about 50 people.

    To build them, CBP has entered a $26 million contract with the U.S. division of Elbit Systems, Israel’s largest military company.

    Tohono O’odham people used to move freely across these lands, Rivas says, but following years of harassment by Border Patrol agents, many are afraid to venture far from their homes.

    “Now we won’t be able to go anywhere near here without the big U.S.-Israeli eyes monitoring us, watching our every move,” she says.

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    1. Fueled by the growing demonization of migrants, as well as ongoing fears of foreign terrorism, the U.S. borderlands have become laboratories for new systems of enforcement and control.

      Firsthand reporting, interviews, and a review of documents for this story provide a window into the high-tech surveillance apparatus CBP is building in the name of deterring illicit migration — and highlight how these same systems often end up targeting other marginalized populations as well as political dissidents.

      The towers on Tohono O’odham land are part of a surge in wide-area persistent surveillance systems across the borderlands.

      Elbit Systems of America has already built 55 integrated fixed towers in southern Arizona, which company executives say cover 200 linear miles.

      According to information provided by a CBP spokesperson, the agency has also deployed 368 smaller surveillance towers, known as RVSS towers, in areas ranging from south of San Diego to the Rio Grande Valley, as well as along parts of the U.S.-Canadian border.

      Civil liberties advocates and academics have pointed out the heightened abuses and increased migrant suffering that have resulted from the new state-of-the-art surveillance gear.

      According to Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst with the American Civil Liberties Union’s Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project, the spread of persistent surveillance technologies is particularly worrisome because they remove any limit on how much information police can gather on a person’s movements.

      “The border is the natural place for the government to start using them since there is much more public support to deploy these sorts of intrusive technologies there,” he said.

      In February, Congress allocated $100 million for integrated fixed towers and mobile surveillance systems, a sign that the towers may soon expand to new locations.

      According to Bobby Brown, senior director of Customs and Border Protection at Elbit Systems of America, the company’s ultimate goal is to build a “layer” of electronic surveillance equipment across the entire perimeter of the U.S.

      “Over time, we’ll expand not only to the northern border but to the ports and harbours across the country,” Brown said in an interview with The Intercept. “There’s a lot to be done.”

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    2. Building the Virtual Wall

      Long before President Donald Trump called for the construction of a “big, beautiful wall” along the U.S.-Mexico border, there was the idea of a “virtual wall.”

      In 2006, Congress authorized the construction of 700 miles of fencing to be accompanied by a vast buildup of surveillance equipment and border guards in more remote terrain.

      A key component of that effort, known as SBINet, was cancelled after five years and more than $1 billion in expenditures. In the wake of that failure, CBP turned to Elbit, based in Haifa, Israel, awarding it a $145 million contract in 2014 to develop the integrated fixed towers in southern Arizona.

      In addition to fixed and mobile surveillance towers, other technology that CBP has acquired and deployed includes blimps outfitted with the high-powered ground and air radar, sensors buried underground, and facial recognition software at ports of entry.

      CBP’s drone fleet has been described as the largest of any U.S. agency outside the Department of Defense.

      The surveillance has had an acute impact on borderland communities, including on the Tohono O’odham reservation.

      Drones fly overhead, and motion sensors track foot traffic.

      CBP checkpoints monitor people travelling between the reservation and cities such as Tucson and Phoenix.

      Vehicle barriers, surveillance cameras, and trucks have appeared near burial grounds and on hilltops amid ancient saguaro forests, which are sacred to people on the reservation.

      Nellie Jo David, a Tohono O’odham tribal member who is writing her dissertation on border security issues at the University of Arizona, says many younger people who have been forced by economic circumstances to work in nearby cities are returning homeless and less because they want to avoid the constant surveillance and harassment.

      “It’s especially taken a toll on our younger generations.”

      Border militarism has been spreading worldwide owing to neoliberal economic policies, wars, and the onset of the climate crisis, all of which have contributed to the uprooting of increasingly large numbers of people, notes Reece Jones, a University of Hawaii-Manoa geography professor who studies borders and migration.

      “The build-up started in the 1990s, but particularly after the declaration of the war on terror, funding began flowing into the border security sector in all these different places around the world,” Jones says.

      The number of fortified borders worldwide soared from 15 to 70 between 2000 and 2015, he added.

      This militarization has, in turn, created new profit opportunities for technology and defence firms.

      In the U.S., leading companies with border security contracts include long-established contractors such as Lockheed Martin in addition to recent upstarts such as Anduril Industries, founded by tech mogul Palmer Luckey to feed the growing market for artificial intelligence and surveillance sensors — primarily in the borderlands.

      Elbit Systems has frequently touted a major advantage over these competitors: the fact that its products are “field-proven” on Palestinians.

      The company built surveillance sensors for Israel’s separation barrier through the West Bank, which has been deemed illegal under international law, as well as around the Gaza Strip and on the northern border with Lebanon and Syria.

      Elbit is also one of the main contractors on a new kind of underground wall, still under construction, around the blockaded Gaza Strip.

      Elbit’s drones patrol the Mediterranean Sea as part of the European Union’s bid to seal off access to migrants from North Africa, and it has provided its technologies to militaries in Australia, Africa, Asia, Central America, and South America.

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    3. Elbit’s contract to deploy IFTs on the Tohono O’odham reservation, which the company announced on June 26, follows several years of contentious debate within the tribal nation, with those living near tower construction sites voicing strident opposition.

      Two years ago, CBP released a study claiming that integrated fixed tower construction wouldn’t cause archaeological, environmental, or community harm.

      The agency also decreased the number of proposed towers and redesigned their bases so they wouldn’t extend underground.

      The Tohono O’odham legislative council unanimously approved the towers on March 22, citing the importance of helping Border Patrol agents stem cross-border drug trafficking.

      In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, Verlon Jose, then-tribal vice chair, said that many nation members calculated that the towers would help dissuade the federal government from building a border wall across their lands.

      The Tohono O’odham are “only as sovereign as the federal government allows us to be,” Jose said. A Border Patrol spokesperson told the newspaper, however, that the IFTs did not eliminate the need for a wall.

      The Tohono O’odham Nation’s current chair and vice-chair did not respond to requests for comment on this story.

      In a statement to The Intercept, CBP spokesperson Meredith Mingledorff said Elbit’s integrated fixed towers enhance Border Patrol agents’ safety at a low cost.

      “IFTs are a ‘force multiplier’ that enables one agent to monitor various different sites remotely from a secure location,” she said.

      “They are the low cost of maintenance and allow for greater efficiency of law enforcement operations, as we can better deploy resources depending on the type of incursion that is detected by the technology.”

      Elbit’s Showcase

      On a sweltering afternoon in early April, Elbit Systems of America executives showcased their latest border surveillance products at a company testing facility in Marana, Arizona, roughly 20 miles northwest of downtown Tucson.

      The event centred around a live demonstration of the IFT command and control system, known as TORCH. The system, which Elbit originally developed for the Israel Defense Forces, is used to monitor people’s movements along Israel’s border and separation walls. Now, it is also used by the Border Patrol at command centres across southern Arizona.

      The event also served as a showcase for Elbit’s high-level political support. U.S. Sen. Martha McSally’s deputy state director was on hand, as was Ron Colburn, former national deputy chief of the Border Patrol and current Elbit adviser. Colburn is perhaps best known for an appearance on Fox News last November defending the Border Patrol’s use of tear gas and pepper spray on migrant caravan participants near Tijuana, who had attempted to cross into the United States.

      Pepper spray “is natural,” Colburn said, before adding, “You could actually put it on your nachos and eat it.”

      Joel Friederich, Elbit Systems of America’s vice president of public safety and homeland security, stood near a wall-sized monitor flanked by a pair of Elbit engineers as reporters and invited guests looked on. On the screen, a satellite map was populated with clusters of yellow and pink dots.

      Several smaller surrounding images displayed live feeds from the various video cameras and radar sensors adorning a demonstration tower on site.

      “This can be zoomed in for many, many miles,” Friederich explained.

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    4. An engineer clicked on one of the yellow dots, zooming in on one of the video feeds.

      Suddenly, several cars inching across U.S. Interstate 10 came distinctly into view.

      He zoomed in further, and the screen settled on a patch of shrubs adjacent to a roadway, close enough that the bright green, swaying tips of the creosote bushes were visible, though they were well over a mile away.

      The operating system uses artificial intelligence to assign an icon representing a human, vehicle, or animal, allowing Border Patrol agents to determine if something moving across the desert is a potential “item of interest,” Friederich noted.

      That item could include “anyone carrying a weapon or a backpack, or anyone in a large group.”

      For Elbit, the holy grail of border surveillance is to ensure that no person can escape TORCH’s ability to track them across time and space in a given area.

      If one of the “items” ducks into a bush, the system can track them using a long-range infrared camera.

      For night operations, the towers have laser illuminators.

      A pick-up truck that can be remotely operated with a surveillance tower and 6-mile camera range is also able to feed data to TORCH in case someone ducks behind a mountain or into a ravine.

      The company is currently marketing the truck to CBP.

      In 2016, Israel became the first country to deploy autonomous vehicles in a border area, which were also created by Elbit.

      Leading Democrats have argued for the development of an ever-more sophisticated border surveillance state as an alternative to Trump’s border wall.

      “The positive, shall we say, an almost technological wall that can be built is what we should be doing,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in January.

      But for those crossing the border, the development of this surveillance apparatus has already taken a heavy toll.

      In January, a study published by researchers from the University of Arizona and Earlham College found that border surveillance towers have prompted migrants to cross along more rugged and circuitous pathways, leading to greater numbers of deaths from dehydration, exhaustion, and exposure.

      Maren Mantovani, international relations coordinator of Stop the Wall, a Palestinian coalition that opposes Israel’s walls in the Palestinian territories and elsewhere, has tracked Elbit’s activities for nearly two decades.

      The company’s business success reflects the central role borders are playing in an emerging global surveillance society, she says.

      “Walls are not only a question of blocking people from moving, but they are also serving as borders or frontiers between where you enter the surveillance state,” she said.

      “The idea is that at the very moment you step near the border, Elbit will catch you. Something similar happens in Palestine.”

      At the 13th annual Border Security Expo in San Antonio, Texas, two weeks prior to the event in Arizona, Friederich said in an interview with The Intercept that Elbit was preparing to bid on a contract to build integrated fixed towers on the U.S.-Canadian border and was eying opportunities in the Rio Grande Valley.

      According to Brown, the Elbit senior director, the company’s border surveillance work will proceed indefinitely regardless of the construction of Trump’s border wall.

      “Border security has always been a three-legged stool — manpower, infrastructure, and technology,” he said. “Infrastructure being the wall.

      Technology being the towers, the mobile systems, ground detection such as sensors. We’re going to keep busy no matter what.”

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    5. Mission Creep

      CBP is by far the largest law enforcement entity in the U.S., with 61,400 employees and a 2018 budget of $16.3 billion — more than the militaries of Iran, Mexico, Israel, and Pakistan.

      The Border Patrol has jurisdiction 100 miles inland from U.S. borders, making roughly two-thirds of the U.S. population theoretically subject to its operations, including the entirety of the Tohono O’odham reservation.

      The agency has received considerable criticism for its often-brutal treatment of migrants.

      But a large percentage of its operations involve routine police work.

      Between 2013 and 2016, for example, roughly 40 percent of Border Patrol seizures at immigration enforcement checkpoints involved 1 ounce or less of marijuana confiscated from U.S. citizens.

      Yet not as much attention has been paid to how the agency uses its sprawling surveillance apparatus for purposes other than border enforcement.

      In 2017, as companies built prototypes for Trump’s border wall in San Diego, CBP stationed one of its RVSS towers nearby to monitor political opposition, citing the “emerging threat of demonstrations,” records show.

      The tower deployment lasted for eight months beginning in September 2017, according to a federal contract tender posted online.

      The only significant demonstration to occur was a peaceful rally that greeted Trump in March 2018 as he conducted a photo-op tour of the wall prototypes.

      Making use of the border surveillance tower to monitor political protests was a seamless transition, according to the contract tender.

      “CBP concluded that the RVSS relocatable tower solution was a logical choice since the placement of this RVSS tower was essentially an extension of the existing RVSS system in place along the border in San Diego, and the tower would also provide surveillance of two areas at one time,” it stated.

      CBP also frequently “shares” its aircraft, including surveillance drones, with other U.S. law enforcement agencies.

      According to flight logs The Intercept obtained via the Freedom of Information Act, between July 2016 and August 2017, CBP conducted 15 drone flights for state and local police spanning 90.2 hours and an additional 53 flights for federal police agencies covering more than 200 hours.

      The logs provided by CBP failed to specify the locations of these flights, but additional documents obtained via public records requests suggest that CBP drone flights included surveillance of Dakota Access pipeline protests.

      In a statement to The Intercept, a CBP spokesperson confirmed that North Dakota law enforcement used the agency’s drone at Standing Rock, claiming that it helped protect local police equipment from threats.

      “The Unmanned Aerial System (UAS) provided a video feed to the local command centre, giving the sheriff’s department and state police situational awareness of the protest while minimizing the threat to their aviation personnel and assets,” the spokesperson wrote.

      During the Standing Rock protests, police and private security personnel regularly justified surveillance by casting pipeline opponents as instigators of violence.

      For its part, Elbit has also marketed its surveillance equipment for use against protesters on at least one occasion, according to records The Intercept obtained via freedom of information requests.

      In November 2016, a company representative offered a system of wide-area persistent surveillance sensors to police monitoring Dakota Access pipeline opponents.

      Elbit’s description of its product, known as GroundEye, touted it as “a paradigm shift in defence and security surveillance,” owing to its “ability to move ‘Back-In-Time,’ to simultaneously track and trace the movements of one or more objects.”

      A spokesperson for the North Dakota Department of Emergency Services said the agency ultimately opted against purchasing the GroundEye system, though she declined to state a reason.

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    6. The ACLU’s Jay Stanley says that CBP’s repurposing of the surveillance tower and drones to surveil dissidents hints at other possible abuses.

      “It’s a reminder that technologies that are sold for one purpose, such as protecting the border or stopping terrorists — or whatever the original justification may happen to be — so often get repurposed for other reasons, such as targeting protesters.”

      That potential is further underscored by a March 2018 email exchange, obtained via open records requests, that shows a high-ranking Border Patrol officer referring to political opposition to Trump border policies as a “threat.” Border Patrol Agent in Charge Christopher M. Seiler, of the agency’s Rio Grande Valley sector, emailed more than 30 other supervisory agents to invite them to a “Large Scale Protest Response Seminar.”

      The leader of the seminar was Paul Laney, the former sheriff of Cass County, North Dakota, who served as the leading architect of the militarized police response at Standing Rock.

      “The current political climate, the uptick in demonstrations and social media campaigns, along with the immigration debate almost ensure that RGV will have large scale protests,” Seiler wrote.

      “These protests pose a significant threat to the border, law enforcement, and our communities.”

      The impacts of the U.S. border on Tohono O’odham people date to the mid-19th century.

      The tribal nation’s traditional land extended 175 miles into Mexico before being severed by the 1853 Gadsden Purchase, a U.S. acquisition of land from the Mexican government.

      As many as 2,500 of the tribe’s more than 30,000 members still live on the Mexican side.

      Tohono O’odham people used to travel between the United States and Mexico fairly easily on roads without checkpoints to visit family, perform ceremonies, or obtain health care.

      But that was before the Border Patrol arrived en masse in the mid-2000s, turning the reservation into something akin to a military occupation zone.

      Residents say agents have administered beatings, used pepper spray, pulled people out of vehicles, shot two Tohono O’odham men under suspicious circumstances, and entered people’s homes without warrants.

      “It is apartheid here,” Ofelia Rivas says.

      “We have to carry our papers everywhere.

      And everyone here has experienced the Border Patrol’s abuse in some way.”

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    7. Nellie Jo David says the constant surveillance has profoundly disrupted the cultural fabric of the Tohono O’odham people, alongside other federal government intrusions like the Barry M. Goldwater Air Force Range, built adjacent to the reservation in the 1940s.

      “The towers are just one more target on our culture and way of life,” David says.

      “We can’t really have the same ceremonies if there are going to be eyes on us, coming from an operational control room with likely a white male agent looking into what it is to be O’odham.”

      Although the Tohono O’odham tribal council has supported the integrated fixed towers, the majority of people living near future construction sites have vocally opposed them.

      Two of the towers are slated for the district of Gu-Vo, or “Big Pond,” where Rivas resides, the westernmost of 11 districts on the reservation.

      The Gu-Vo governing council passed a resolution against the towers in 2017, citing firm opposition to residents placed under persistent surveillance and a desire to protect sacred burial sites, ceremonial areas, and harvesting grounds.

      In the process of opposing the towers, Tohono O’odham people have developed common cause with other communities struggling against colonization and border walls.

      David is among numerous activists from the U.S. and Mexican borderlands who joined a delegation to the West Bank in 2017, convened by Stop the Wall, to build relationships and learn about the impacts of Elbit’s surveillance systems.

      “I don’t feel safe with them taking over my community, especially if you look at what’s going on in Palestine — they’re bringing the same thing right over here to this land,” she says.

      “The U.S. government is going to be able to surveil basically anybody on the nation.”

      – The Intercept
      – https://theintercept.com/2019/08/25/border-patrol-israel-elbit-surveillance/

      Delete
  39. China's eye in the sky: An Analysis of China's satellite surveillance

    ANI | Asia | October 30, 2019.

    China is investing heavily on spy satellites, dozens of which are whizzing high above Earth at this very moment. Indeed, China's 2015 Defense White Paper described space as a military domain, and China currently has 75+ military satellites operated by the Strategic Support Force of the People's Liberation Army (PLA).

    When the USA dispatched aircraft carriers in the 1995-96 Taiwan Strait Crisis to deter China in the international spat, Beijing leaders promised themselves they would develop systems and weapons to both detect and then attack such powerful US military assets. However, a US Navy carrier can travel 800km per day, so China desperately needed to find ways to keep eyes on potentially hostile platforms in a perpetual game of hide and seek.

    China uses a multitude of sensors - such as satellites soaring above, over-the-horizon radars, surface warships and submarines, maritime patrol aircraft and underwater sensors - to keep track of adversaries sailing in places like the South China Sea, Taiwan Strait and East China Sea. Not only that, but China's interests are creeping farther into the Western Pacific and the Indian Ocean.

    Professor David Stupples, director of electronic warfare systems research at City University of London, explained that "tensions in the South China Sea have demanded a significant Chinese military presence supported by unprecedented levels of signals intelligence (SIGINT) activity...driven by China's need for economic growth, security and to become the dominant world power."

    Thus, China is constantly adding to an integrated maritime SIGINT system combining data collected from acoustic sensing buoys, surface SIGINT vessels, satellites and underwater gliders to strategically placed intelligence centers. A large PLA SIGINT facility on Hainan Island helps monitor US naval activity in the South China Sea. Many analysts expect Woody Island in the Spratly Islands to become a major SIGINT facility to give Beijing an unprecedented reconnaissance overview of that area.

    It is also reported that China is monitoring US naval activity near Guam through acoustic sensors it planted in the Mariana Trench and near the island of Yap. Such work is routinely done under the heading of "scientific research", but it has a much more nefarious purpose.

    Stupples assessed that China's military SIGINT human resources are around 200,000 personnel and with an estimated budget of USD10-15 billion per annum. Thus, if the upper range of this figure is accepted, China could be spending about 10 per cent of its defense budget on SIGINT. The English professor stated, "China maintains, by far, the most extensive SIGINT capability of any nation in the Asia-Pacific region."

    Just like the USA and Russia, China relies heavily on the space domain, with constellations of space-borne electronic intelligence (ELINT) and communications intelligence (COMINT) systems plus photo-reconnaissance, imaging and communications satellites. To monitor maritime territory like the South China Sea, surveillance comprises the two separate tasks of detecting and identifying all ships in a wide area and then tracking specific ships overtime after they have been identified as objects of interest.

    In terms of coverage of the world's oceans, China's Yaogan series of high-resolution optical and radar reconnaissance (i.e. tactical imaging and ELINT) satellites is critical. The most recent satellite in this series, the fifth batch of Yaogan-30, was successfully launched by a Long March-2C rocket from Xichang on 26 July 2019. State media euphemistically reported that the high-revisit satellite triplet would be used mainly for "electromagnetic detection and related technological tests". In more explicit terms, these satellites hunt in groups of three by gathering information derived from ship/aircraft radar and electromagnetic signatures.

    Cont. Below...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This particular Yaogan-30 Group-05 launch was the 308th mission for the Long March rocket series, and it placed the satellites in a 35° orbit 600km above Earth. The Yaogan-30 series built by the Chinese Academy of Science operates in threes in relatively close proximity so they can accurately pinpoint signal emissions. A sixth triplet of the Yaogan-30 series was expected to be launched by the end of October 2019.

      The first Yaogan-30 triplet was lofted into space on 29 September 2017. The addition of successive triplets to the same orbital plane improves the family's revisit rate, with an eventual constellation of 18 satellites to be created. This will allow the PLA to pass over an area 19 times per day in vertical-imaging mode, or 54 times a day in off-vertical SIGINT mode. Indeed, Stupples suggested, "There will be almost continuous coverage of key areas of the globe."

      Yaogan-30 is just one ELINT part of the extensive Yaogan network that includes SAR and optical-imaging satellites. An analytical report that first appeared on the French-language East Pendulum website provides more detail on this family and China's efforts to conduct maritime surveillance from space. This report was also published in English by its author "Gosnold" on an online blog called SatelliteObservation.net.

      Gosnold lists other ELINT satellites (Yaogan-9, -16, -17, -20 and -25 triplets) in the JianBing-8 constellation that are orbiting at an inclined 63° plane, though the first two are likely already replaced. As well as being ELINT devices, they might carry an optical and SAR too. They can hunt for radio and radar emissions from warships but, if targets are under radio silence, they will naturally not be so effective.

      Whilst on the topic of ELINT satellites, Tongxin Jishu Shiyan-1 is one too, having a geostationary orbit at 155° after being launched in 2015. China described Tongxin Jishu Shiyan-4, launched on 17 October 2019, as an "experimental communication satellite", but this family remains very mysterious and military applications are implied by such secrecy.

      Returning to the Yaogan family, the JianBing-7 constellation (consisting of Yaogan-6, -13, -18 and -23) orbits 520km in space carrying SARs. According to the SatelliteObservation.net report: "SAR satellites are very useful in maritime surveillance, thanks to their wide swath, which can reach several hundred kilometers. This enables them to find ships, given a very rough idea of where they might be, in any weather. However, the wide swath modes of such a system generally have a low resolution, measured in the tens of meters. This makes ship identification difficult. Consequently, a higher-resolution system, or another pass of the same satellite but in high-resolution mode, is needed. Ship motion can severely limit the image quality in high-resolution modes." SARs can be used both in daytime and at night, unlike optical satellites that only function in daylight.

      China also operates Yaogan-18 and -23 that operate in pairs so that morning and afternoon passes can occur. These SARs have a maximum resolution of 1m and maximum swath of 650km. The JianBing-5 constellation (Yaogan-10 and -29) flies higher and makes an overhead pass at dusk and dawn with their SARs. They have plenty of electrical power since their solar panels follow the sun's rotation.

      Cont. Below...

      Delete
    2. As for optical satellites, the JianBing-6 constellation consists of Yaogan-11, -24 and -30 flying in a polar sun-synchronous orbit to give morning and afternoon revisits. They likely carry two cameras to widen coverage and give stereoscopic images. However, their 70km swath is probably too small to detect ships at sea. Even if hunting for previously identified ships, a vessel sailing at 30 knots could escape their visibility in just 40 minutes.

      The JianBing-10, a second optical constellation, consists of Yaogan-5, -12 and -21 orbiting at a lower altitude of 500km to provide only morning passes. Their dual-camera system probably gives better resolution but they still face the same limitations as JianBing-6.

      The JianBing-11 constellation provides an afternoon supplement to JianBing-10, with Yaogan-14 and -28 optical satellites. Placed on the same orbit as JiangBing-10 is the JianBing-12 (Yaogan-26) optical satellite, but with a single large-diameter telescope that could offer 20-25 cm ground resolution. However, such fine resolution makes it less useful for maritime monitoring.

      The JianBing-9 optical constellation features Yaogan-15, -19, -22 and -27 in a polar sun-synchronous orbit 1,200km above Earth. The SatelliteObservation.net report commented: "This constellation is placed on a surprisingly high orbit for optical satellites. Because of this height, the spatial resolution is lowered but the swath is increased. The constellation is made up of a first pair of satellites, which provides morning passes, and a second pair for afternoon passes. This enables same-day revisit of any point around the globe, with a small viewing angle (around 25°). It also makes extremely short revisit times possible: the two satellites of a pair follow each other, with a separation of 10 minutes. Thus, they can successively observe the same region with an acceptable maximum viewing angle (around 45°) and estimate the speed of ships in this region."

      This constellation carrying off-axis telescopes is believed to be dedicated to maritime surveillance. They cover a swath 100-1,000km wide and have a resolution somewhere between 4.5m and 80cm. They would have an ability to repoint, which could double their swath. Gosnold speculates these satellites might also possess a thermal infrared sensor so they can spot ships at nighttime. Or instead, they might have a 1,550km-wide-swath camera possessing a 30m resolution. Such performance means they could cover all the world's oceans and detect large vessels like oil tankers and carriers.

      Moving on, Gaofen-4 is a one-of-a-kind optical satellite launched in December 2015. It is China's only high-resolution imaging satellite to be placed in geostationary orbit.

      (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

      - ANI
      - Business Standard (BS)
      - https://www.business-standard.com/article/news-ani/china-s-eye-in-the-sky-an-analysis-of-china-s-satellite-surveillance-119103000151_1.html

      Delete
  40. Dutch police seize 'illegal' Myanmar teak

    Andrew Nachemson and Lun Min Mang on Friday, December 6, 2019

    In the first raid of its kind, Dutch police have allegedly seized a haul of teak from Myanmar, circumvented through the Czech Republic in contravention of EU law, according to the Environmental Investigation Agency. The activist group has been campaigning against the shipping of non-compliant timber into Europe through members states with weaker law enforcement, including in a 2018 report ‘State of Corruption’. Police apparently found the wood after intercepting a convoy of lorries. Like most illegal Myanmar teak in Europe, it was probably destined to become decking for a luxury yacht. No details have yet emerged about which companies or individuals were involved.

    - Frontier Myanmar
    - via Email

    ReplyDelete
  41. The treatment of the Rohingya as foreign citizens compel many to flee and this group of mother and children were caught without citizenship papers... Apparently this group intends to flee to Malaysia.

    More can be read from here: https://ethnicburmeserefugees.blogspot.com/2019/11/the-hnget-awe-san-youth-rehabilitation.html


    Rohingya on trial for immigration violations

    Andrew Nachemson and Lun Min Mang on Friday, December 13, 2019

    As Aung San Suu Kyi continued to deny present day mistreatment of the Rohingya, four were on trial in Bago for allegedly violating immigration law. While court hearings are usually open to the public, the judge did not allow Frontier to enter the courtroom, but we were able to eavesdrop at the door. Seven Rohingya and two smugglers were arrested on November 8 while the smugglers were trying to bring the group from Thailand to Malaysia through Myanmar. The Rohingya have been charged under Article 13(1) which could result in a one year prison sentence for illegally entering and remaining in Myanmar. An officer from the Ministry of Immigration was the plaintiff.

    Officer Aung Zaw Tun, who made the arrest, testified as a witness, and tried to paint himself in a merciful light. “They actually violated two rules but we only sued with one, because two would mean more years in prison for them,” he said. “The car they were travelling in had black windows and we made them stop for that. We had to detain them for a while before we could investigate with a translator, because they did not speak Burmese.”

    Within the group of seven, all from Maungdaw Township, was a family of four - a mother and her three young children aged nine, seven, and six. The smugglers reportedly let her travel for free and promised her a job in Malaysia where she believed her husband had escaped to. She is being detained at a prison in Bago Region, while the children are under the care of police officers at the Payagyi police station in Bago Township. They are only permitted to see their mother during hearings at the township court. The next court hearing will be on December 24.

    - Frontier Myanmar
    - via Email

    ReplyDelete
  42. Ethnic human trafficking charges

    Andrew Nachemson and Lun Min Mang on Friday, December 13, 2019

    Three people, including one Chinese national, have been arrested on human trafficking charges for allegedly sending Myanmar women from Kachin State to China without work permits. They were caught after they allegedly beat one of the women, who then escaped and alerted police. Nine women were rescued, while a Chinese national is on the lam.

    UNICEF put out a statement mourning the death of a nine-year-old boy who was killed in Rakhine State while still wearing his school uniform. The UN body called for the Tatmadaw and AA to “ensure the full respect of the civilian character of schools”.

    - Frontier Myanmar
    - via Email

    ReplyDelete
  43. Two Thai soldiers face rare murder charges in restive south

    Published on Dec 26th, 2019

    Two soldiers in Thailand’s south have been charged with the murder of civilians, a military spokesman said yesterday, in a rare rebuke in the insurgency-torn region where rights groups have long demanded greater transparency.

    The two turned themselves in on Dec 20 and are now out on bail, Internal Security Operations Command spokesman Pramote Prom-in said. He gave no details about the victims.

    “There will be an investigation and we will follow the legal procedures,” he said.

    The charges come months after a nationwide furore over the death in a separate case of Abdulloh Esormusor, a suspected insurgent who fell into a coma after interrogation at an army camp.
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    The Thai military rejected allegations of torture and urged the public to wait for the result of an official inquiry.

    A decade-old separatist insurgency in predominantly Buddhist Thailand’s largely ethnic Malay-Muslim southern provinces has killed nearly 7,000 people since 2004, says Deep South Watch, a group that monitors the violence.

    - Reuters
    - Mkini
    - https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/504894

    ReplyDelete
  44. Joint operation against trespassers prevents RM6b loss in fish catch

    Bernama: Jan 5th, 2020

    The "Operasi Naga" (Operation Dragon) initiated in April last year, prevented a loss of about RM6 billion in fish catch, said Agriculture and Agro-based Industry Minister Salahuddin Ayub.

    The combined effect of the operation and amendments to the Fisheries Act 1985, passed in Parliament on July 9, provided stiffer fines and also resulted in RM560 million in savings, in reference to fish catch brought onshore and the auctioning of seized boats.

    The operation was jointly undertaken by the Agriculture and Agro-based Industry, Home Affairs, Defence and Foreign Affairs ministries.

    In an interview with Bernama recently, Salahuddin (photo) said a total of 211 vessels were detained while five others were sunk for the purpose of serving as fish breeding structures, and as a result of these efforts, this prevented a loss of some RM6 billion in fish catch.

    He said the sea ecosystem had also been saved from further damage by the activities of foreign fishermen who had been sailing in Malaysian waters with impunity, using illegal fishing equipment.

    "We want to solve the predicament faced by local fishermen whose livelihoods have been depleted by foreigners fishing in Malaysian waters illegally and damaging our ecosystem.

    "All assets have been used to protect our waters from trespassers. This was a big issue when I joined the ministry in 2018, with fishermen complaining about all sorts of things including trespass by foreign fishing vessels," he said.

    Of the 211 vessels detained, 148 were detected in Peninsular Malaysia waters, 41 in Sarawak and 22 in Sabah.

    The amendments to the Fisheries Act which have given much-needed teeth to enforcement activities include an increase in the maximum fine to be imposed on the owners or captains of vessels found trespassing, from RM1 million to RM6 million, as well as a fine of RM600,000 compared to RM100,000 previously, on each crew member.

    Salahuddin, who is also Pulai MP said the Fisheries Act enabled his ministry to issue licences to fish in high seas, particularly for tuna fishing in the Indian Ocean, an industry which Malaysia is exploring further.

    He said tuna fishing currently undertaken, yields a total catch of about 30,000 metric tonnes a year, with an estimated value of RM300 million.

    So far, about 19 such licences have been issued to entrepreneurs who have fulfilled the relevant criteria such as the possession of modern vessels and equipment, while approximately 200 more will be issued over the next two to three years.

    The licence-holders will be required to bring their catch onshore, in several places such as Langkawi, Penang and Tanjung Pelepas in Johor, he added.

    On other matters, Salahuddin said his ministry was targeting to establish between 15 and 20 new fishermen's markets this year, in a bid to enable fishermen to sell their produce directly to consumers, thus obviating the need for middle-men.

    There are currently 129 fishermen's markets across the country patronised by 558 entrepreneurs. - Bernama

    - Mkini
    - https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/505957

    ReplyDelete
  45. Hezbollah observes anti-tunnel sensor installation at the Israeli border

    By Joe Truzman | January 22, 2020

    From the Lebanese side of the border, equipment can be seen in Israel drilling into the earth. The type of work being done is out of the ordinary for what usually occurs on the Israeli side of the border.

    Central Media, a publisher for Hezbollah, stated on Tuesday; “At 10:30 this morning, Tuesday 21-01-2020, the Israeli enemy, through a civilian company, began the drilling work at the border numbering 410 opposite the town of al Adaisah in southern Lebanon, amid a modest presence of military forces of the Israeli army.”

    The drilling work Hezbollah observed was the installation of anti-tunnel sensors. This comes after the announcement made by the Israel Defense Forces on Sunday; “We have started deploying highly-sophisticated technical infrastructure along Israel’s border with Lebanon. These sensors will identify and prevent underground construction of attack tunnels into Israel by the Hezbollah terror organization in Lebanon.”

    The installation of the anti-tunnel sensors comes a little over a year after Operation Northern Shield where the IDF exposed and neutralized several cross-border Hezbollah attack tunnels that originated from Lebanon.

    Hezbollah has previously published many videos and photographs of the IDF’s activity at the border. During Operation Northern Shield, its media publisher, Central Media, kept a constant update about the movements of the IDF and its activity at the border.

    The video and photographs published showed how Hezbollah is able to monitor the IDF’s movements. It also serves as a warning of how exposed IDF soldiers are to weapon fire, especially anti-tank guided missiles which Hezbollah has used extensively in Syria and in previous battles against the IDF.

    In another example of Hezbollah’s observation of IDF activity at the border, a Merkava IV tank guards a position as work is being done at the security barrier.

    The clear line of sight leaves it vulnerable to anti-tank fire. Although, the Merkava IV, is likely equipped with an Active Protection System called TROPHY, which protects it from anti-tank guided missile fire.

    Hezbollah will likely continue its observation of IDF activity at the border. It has done so for many years to gather information and locate IDF positions near the border. The publication of Hezbollah’s observation of the anti-tunnel sensor installation is one example of a history of psychological warfare to let their enemy know their activity is being monitored.

    Joe Truzman is a contributor to FDD's Long War Journal.

    - The Long War Journal
    https://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2020/01/hezbollah-observes-anti-tunnel-sensor-installation-at-the-israeli-border.php

    ReplyDelete
  46. Man caught with wildlife organs worth RM1.1 million

    Bernama; Published: Jan 25th, 2020

    Police detained a man and seized wildlife organs and agarwood worth RM1.1 million in a raid on a house in Miri, Sarawak yesterday.

    Bukit Aman Internal Security and Public Order Department director Acryl Sani Abdullah Sani said the raid was conducted by the 12th Battalion of the Miri General Operations Force.

    He said the house was believed to have been used as a temporary store before the wildlife organs were marketed overseas.

    "During the raid, police found various grades and sizes of agarwood, five deer heads with antlers, 19 deer antler pieces, two preserved monitor lizards and two tortoises.

    "All the seized organs have been handed over to the Miri branch of the Sarawak Forestry Corporation for further action, and the case is being investigated under section 29 of the Sarawak Wildlife Protection Ordinance 1998," he said in a statement here today. - Bernama

    - Mkini
    - https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/508365

    ReplyDelete
  47. ESSCom: 40 kidnapping attempts foiled since 2018

    Bernama; Published: Jan 26th, 2020

    Since 2018 to date, the security forces have thwarted 40 kidnapping attempts in the waters off seven districts in the Eastern Sabah Security Zone (ESSZone),

    Eastern Sabah Security Command (ESSCom) commander Hazani Ghazali (photo) said this was due to the close cooperation of the Royal Malaysia Police, Malaysian Armed Forces and the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency.

    He said measures to enhance security by tightening control at risky routes were able to detect the kidnap-for-ransom activities carried out by terrorist groups from the southern Philippines.

    "If we were to look back to 2017, there were no abduction cases, 2018 (two cases), 2019 (two cases). We have been able to foil several kidnapping attempts since 2018, because when ESSCom receives information all our personnel and assets will be deployed," he told Bernama.

    - Mkini
    - https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/508507

    ReplyDelete
  48. Thailand, Indonesia to share intelligence to combat insurgents

    Reuters | Published: Jan 15th, 2020

    Thailand and Indonesia signed an intelligence-sharing agreement that the Thai army chief said would help limit the movements of insurgents operating in the Muslim-majority southern region of Thailand.

    Buddhist-majority Thailand and Muslim-majority Indonesia will share information on “movements of extremists, rebels or perpetrator groups who have been undermining national security”, the official document seen by Reuters said.

    It was signed during an official visit by Thai Army Chief General Apirat Kongsompong to the Indonesian province of Aceh on Tuesday.

    “This is about limiting the freedom to operate by groups because we will be sharing information and monitoring individuals,” Apirat said.

    He said that Indonesia, particularly Aceh, has been used in the past by Thai insurgent groups to train as well as to hide and plan operations against Thailand.

    Thailand is fighting a Muslim separatist insurgency in the southern provinces of Yala, Pattani and Narathiwat that has killed nearly 7,000 people since 2004, according to the Deep South Watch monitoring group.

    In one recent attack, the insurgents stormed a security checkpoint and killed 15 people.

    Top Indonesian general Perkasa did not mention any specific militant groups that Jakarta was requesting Thailand to monitor but stressed regional cooperation.

    “In handling any security issue, we should handle it together,” General Perkasa said.

    Threats to Indonesia include Islamist militant groups like Jemaah Islamiyah and other Islamic State-inspired groups.

    Aceh was embroiled in an insurgency that killed 15,000 people over three decades until a 2005 truce between the Free Aceh Movement and Jakarta that gave the region special autonomy and allowed it to implement Syariah law.

    Apirat, however, expressed no imminent hope for a peace deal with the southern Thai insurgents.

    “I have said that the land within the Kingdom of Thailand cannot be separated, but there continues to be those who are against this all the time, so how can peace be achieved?” he said. — Reuters

    - Mkini
    - https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/507182

    ReplyDelete
  49. Hong Kong police test thermal DJI drones for its elite units
    The Chinese firm was subject of US ban because of cybersecurity concerns


    Christy Leung
    Published: 28 Sep, 2017

    Hong Kong’s elite police squads have been testing thermal drones made by the Chinese company that recently had its equipment banned by the US military over cybersecurity concerns, according to sources. The drones, made by DJI, the world’s largest manufacturer of unmanned aircraft vehicles, were under consideration for anti-crime and antiterrorism operations, senior police sources told the Post. But they would not be used for surveillance at rallies or protests. “Besides using it to fight against terrorism, the infrared night vision can help locate culprits, such as illegal immigrants, burglars and abductors, hiding in mountains or dim public areas,” one source said.
    DJI was the subject of controversy last month after a US army memo ordered all soldiers to stop using equipment made by the company because of an unspecified security risk.
    The ban also prompted Australia’s defence department to suspend using drones of the same brand for two weeks. The drones were back in use after the Australian military revised operating procedures.

    Cont. Below...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hong Kong police bought the drones before the US ban and elite units have been conducting trial runs in their headquarters in Fanling. The drone model, which is equipped with infrared sensors and cameras that capture high-quality contrasting images that can read body temperatures, is not listed on DJI’s website and is not available to the public.
      “The drones also facilitate site survey and rescue missions in bad weather, such as rain and fog, a senior police source said. “The aircraft can reach and search places that are difficult for officers to access.”
      The sources all said the force saw “no need” to deploy the drones to monitor public rallies, such as the July 1 annual pro-democracy marches, adding that police officials were “very conscious” of the public outcry their use would cause.
      DJI, which is based in Shenzhen, tightened data security on its drones soon after the American ban, which the US military said was “due to increased awareness of cyber vulnerabilities associated with DJI products”. Without detailing the security concerns, the US military ordered the removal of all DJI applications, batteries and storage media from the devices. DJI later updated its software to prevent flight data from being shared online. A DJI spokesman said last month that the company did not collect data for profit and was committed to ensuring cyber-security for all of its customers.

      Cont. Below...

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    2. Hong Kong police were aware of the ban and software updates DJI made, the sources said. The senior police source emphasised that the force was still testing the drones, and there was no decision on whether to use the aircraft as “regular equipment”. “We have not used it in real operations so far. We have to test the aircraft in many aspects, such as its durability, legal issues, privacy concerns and its impacts on members of the public.”
      Another senior source said the use of drones in rescue missions was an “increasing global trend” which had prompted the force to “have a thought about it”.
      “But there are many limitations we have to hurdle,” he said. “Intrusive surveillance is not on our table so far because it causes legal issues and privacy concerns. We need a court warrant if we use it.” A police spokeswoman refused to comment in detail about the drones, saying only that the force regularly reviewed equipment to ensure its suitability. “Police will source and procure different items of equipment suitable for operational purposes in accordance with the established procurement procedures,” she said. The Fire Services Department has spent HK$200,000 on three DJI drones, including one with thermal imaging. The devices were used in a successful rescue operation at Sharp Peak less than two weeks ago.
      A spokeswoman said fire services would inform the Civil Aviation Department (CAD) about the locations and duration of operations, as well as intended flight altitude limit. The CAD said drone operators, including those in the police and fire services as well as civilians, should follow safety rules and were governed by Article 48 of the Air Navigation Order. “A person shall not recklessly or negligently cause or permit an aircraft to endanger any person or property. The requirement applies to government departments operating unmanned aircraft,” a CAD spokeswoman said.
      - SCMP
      - https://amp.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/law-crime/article/2113089/hong-kong-police-test-thermal-dji-drones-its-elite-units

      Delete
  50. Police intensify surveillance of M'sian waters, illegal routes with drones

    Bernama, Published 5 Apr 2020/

    CORONAVIRUS | Police have increased control and surveillance of the country's waters following attempts to bring in undocumented migrants via illegal routes.

    Disclosing this, Inspector-General of Police Abdul Hamid Bador said some irresponsible parties were trying to smuggle undocumented migrants into the country by boat during the movement control order (MCO) period.

    “There are attempts (to bring in the undocumented migrants) via the East Coast of Sabah and the West Coast of the Peninsular and this is being monitored.

    “I personally went down to the security post at Morib Beach, Sepang to remind and motivate the police to increase patrols so that the undocumented migrants could not slip in as they bring risks,” he told Bernama in Bukit Aman.

    Meanwhile, asked about the use of drones, he said the technology was effective and has helped to monitor the movement of people during the MCO to curb the spread of Covid-19.

    “Praise be to Allah, the drone technology has been particularly helpful in red zone areas. For instance, in Simpang Renggam in Johor and Sungai Lui in Hulu Langat, the drones have helped the police and Armed Forces to obtain accurate data on the location of houses.

    “To go to each house in the red zone would be difficult, so we use drones which save time and reduce the risk of enforcement personnel from being exposed to infection,” he said.

    Abdul Hamid said the drone would be flown high to see the entire red zone to track the illegal routes.

    “The drones are flown at high altitudes to monitor areas that are hard to access to detect illegal routes so that roadblocks could be imposed.

    “Now police have mobilised every asset to ensure the people comply with the MCO,” he said.

    On March 23, Bernama reported that the Armed Forces and the police were using drones and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to help with the MCO monitoring.

    Meanwhile, Abdul Hamid said the presence of military personnel had improved the implementation of MCO with more roadblocks and patrols being carried out.

    “We used to have issues on shelters (at the roadblocks) and so on, now (it has been resolved with) military tents and the military have logistics for such tasks,” he said.

    He also assured that the police had a sufficient number of personnel to carry out enforcement works throughout the MCO period.

    “The task is very challenging, but the police have enough officers and members, we also have reserve personnel who can be mobilised when needed,” he said.

    - Bernama
    - Mkini
    - https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/518905

    ReplyDelete
  51. Police increase 100pct deployment of officers monitoring borders, waters

    Bernama | Published 6 Apr 2020

    CORONAVIRUS | The police will increase the deployment of staff patrolling all of the country’s borders and waters by 100 percent, to prevent the entry of undocumented migrants into the country throughout the imposition of the movement control order (MCO).

    Inspector-General of Police Abdul Hamid Bador said so far, almost 2,500 officers have been deployed to these areas as part of efforts to prevent the spread of Covid-19 among undocumented migrants.

    He said the increase in deployments was in response to the statement by the Health Ministry that the country was at risk of experiencing a third wave of Covid-19 infections from other countries.

    “The virus could be brought in by undocumented migrants using back channels and their presence in the country without undergoing health screening definitely poses a high risk,” he said at a special press conference at Bukit Aman today.

    Apart from these added deployments, Abdul Hamid said the police had also launched several operations including "Op Nyah", "Op Wawasan", "Op Awas" and "Op Batas" in Sarawak, as well as "Op Taring" in Sabah, as part of efforts to prevent the entry of undocumented migrants into the country.

    - Bernama
    - Mkini
    - https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/519163

    ReplyDelete
  52. Vietnamese fisherman shot dead in South China Sea clash

    AFP - August 17, 2020

    KUALA LUMPUR: The Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA) shot dead a Vietnamese fisherman whose boat tried to ram a patrol vessel in the South China Sea.

    The incident took place in Malaysian waters, where local fishermen have complained in the past about Vietnamese fishing boats damaging their nets.

    MMEA chief Zubil Mat Som told AFP that two Vietnamese fishing boats had entered Malaysian waters some 80 nautical miles from Tok Bali, off Kelantan, on Sunday.

    “The coast guard crew had earlier fired warning shots in the air but after the Vietnamese boats rammed and threw a bottle of petrol, my men had no choice but to open fire in self-defence,” he said.

    Zubil alleged the Vietnamese crew had thrown petrol and a tyre to try and set fire to the MMEA boat, which was damaged by the “aggressive ramming”.

    A Vietnamese fisherman suffered gunshot wounds and was pronounced dead after he was brought to shore.

    “We are saddened by this incident. But I can guarantee that my men took this action to protect their lives and our national sovereignty,” said Zubil.

    The Vietnamese boats with the remaining 20 crew members were towed to the MMEA jetty.

    Parts of the South China Sea are subject to rival claims by Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam while Beijing claims the entire waterway.

    The rival claims to the sea, which straddles vital shipping lanes and covers rich fishing grounds, make it a potential flashpoint for conflict.

    China and Asean – where four claimants are members of – are currently in talks for a code of conduct in the area.

    While not a claimant, the US has been sending “freedom of navigation” patrols to international waters, but China has slammed these as interference in regional affairs.

    In February, Putrajaya sought to secure a deal with Hanoi to end alleged intrusions into Malaysian waters by Vietnamese vessels.

    - AFP
    - via FMT
    - https://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/nation/2020/08/17/vietnamese-fisherman-shot-dead-in-south-china-sea-clash/

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  53. 6,782 illegal immigrants deported from Sabah since Jan 1 TO Oct 23 — KDN

    04 NOV 2020

    KUALA LUMPUR: A total of 6,782 illegal immigrants detained in Sabah, have been deported to their respective countries including the Philippines and Indonesia, since Jan 1 up to Oct 23 in efforts to address the increasing number of illegals in the state.

    The Home Ministry (KDN) informed that during the same period, the Immigration Department conducted 720 operations where 16,270 foreigners were questioned.

    In the operations, 1,840 illegal immigrants and 24 employers were arrested for various offences, the ministry said in a written reply posted on the Parliament website in response to a question from Yamanis Hafez Musa (Bersatu-Sipitang) on the issue.

    KDN said the government had also set up a committee to manage foreigners in Sabah (JKPWAS) following the recommendation of the Royal Commission of Inquiry (RCI) on Foreign Immigrants in Sabah aimed to study and discuss issues related to immigrants and foreigners in the state.

    The committee is always taking proactive steps to address issues arising in implementing the action plan formulated by the RCI, including the illegal immigrant issue in Sabah, through meetings scheduled regularly throughout the year, according to KDN. — Bernama

    -theSundaily.com

    https://www.thesundaily.my/local/6782-illegal-immigrants-deported-from-sabah-since-jan-1-to-oct-23-kdn-DL4973656

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  54. Terrorism: M'sian among 16 foreigners repatriated from S'pore

    Bernama

    24 Nov 2020

    A Malaysian was among 16 foreigners who were repatriated from Singapore as part of heightened security posture following a spate of terror attacks in France and elsewhere.

    The Malaysian was found to be radicalised and harboured the intention to travel to Syria or Palestine to partake in armed violence, said the republic’s Ministry of Home Affairs in a statement today.

    The other 15 were Bangladeshis, most of whom were working in the construction industry.

    In a response to the recent terror attacks in France, they had made social media postings which incited violence or stoked communal unrest, said the ministry.

    “In view of the deteriorating security situation, the Home Team has been on heightened alert since early September, and had also stepped up its security activities to pre-empt copycat attacks in Singapore,” the ministry said.

    In total, 37 individuals were investigated by the Internal Security Department, it said, adding that of the total, 14 were Singaporeans, and 23 were foreigners.

    “The investigations into the remaining seven foreigners are still ongoing,” it added.

    - Bernama
    - Mkini
    - https://malaysiakini.com/news/552341

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  55. IGP: Two more Thais nabbed over border shootout

    Bernama

    Published 25 Nov 2020

    Two more Thais were arrested in Perlis today, bringing to eight the number of Thai nationals nabbed for the fatal shootout at the Malaysia-Thailand border yesterday, said Inspector-General of Police Abdul Hamid Bador.

    He said the two suspects were arrested at 7am at the border wall in Padang Besar, bringing to four the number of Thais nabbed in Malaysian territory after the shootout.

    The other four suspects were arrested by Thai authorities in Thailand yesterday.

    “We believe these two Thais could not escape because they failed to find a way to get past the border wall. So, when we (security forces) conducted ‘sweeping’ in the farms and bushes, we came upon these two.

    “They have been taken for further questioning. We are in talks and will make an official application to the Royal Thai Police to hand over to us the four arrested in Thailand to face justice (in Malaysia),” he added.

    He told reporters this after attending the burial of Corporal Baharuddin Ramli, 54, who was killed in the shootout with smugglers early yesterday.

    - BERNAMA
    - Mkini
    - https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/552467

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  56. Malaysia to use drones to monitor border with Thailand

    Monday, 01 Jun 2020

    PASIR MAS: The Malaysian Border Security Agency (Aksem) will use drones to monitor the situation along the Malaysia-Thailand border, especially to curb the entry of illegal immigrants into the country.

    Its deputy director-general Mohd Redzuan Mohd Zain said 25 units of high-tech drones would be used in the four states bordering Thailand, namely Kelantan, Perlis, Kedah and Perak.

    “Aksem requested 25 units of drone and they are expected to be commissioned by July 1.

    “Each state will get two drone units and they will be tasked with monitoring the country’s land and maritime borders.

    “They will assist us in addressing the problem of illegal immigrants, ” he told reporters after inspecting an illegal jetty in Rantau Panjang on Saturday night.

    Mohd Redzuan said Aksem also applied for 25 units of four-wheel drive vehicles (4WDs).

    He said the 4WDs were crucial to assist them at the border due to the terrain and road condition which required tougher vehicles.

    “For instance, the distance between Kelantan and Perlis is 662km with 137 rat routes while the Malaysia-Thailand border at Sungai Golok is 95km long and most rat routes are in this area, ” he said. — Bernama

    - the Star
    - https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2020/06/01/malaysia-to-use-drones-to-monitor-border-with-thailand#openShareModal

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  57. No proof ambush attack at Narathiwat originated from M’sia - Kelantan police
    Bernama

    Published 4 Aug 2021, 4:49 pm

    Kelantan Police today denied allegations that the attack on the Ranger Company Combat Operations Post in Tak Bai, Narathiwat, Thailand, early Tuesday morning, was carried out from the Sungai Golok river bank on the Malaysian side.

    State police chief Shafien Mamat said the allegations had no solid basis as there was no such evidence submitted by the Thai military.

    He said based on the Thai army’s claims, the attack on the post was carried by Thai insurgents and that it was launched from the riverbank on the Malaysian side of the border.

    “Kelantan police have investigated the location, that is Pengkalan Haram Ikan Kering, Kubang Pak Ikan, Pasir Mas which was allegedly used by the separatists to carry out the attack.

    “However, no evidence of bullet casings or traces of gunfire were found at the location," he said in a statement today.

    Shafien said following the incident, the police had tightened border security there.

    Yesterday, one ranger was killed and four soldiers were injured in an ambush from an armed group of men at the makeshift army camp at about 2.20am (local time).

    The Sungai Golok borders the Malaysian state of Kelantan and the Thai province of Narathiwat.

    - Bernama
    - https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/585846

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