Tesco and Morrisons ban Chinese CCTV cameras over national security concerns

// Tesco, Morrisons and M&S have stopped purchasing Chinese-made CCTV cameras amid privacy fears and concerns of the companies’ products being linked to human rights abuses in China.
// Concerns have been aired over Hikvision and Dahua and their alleged involvement in the suppression of the Uyghur Muslim minority residing in north-west China

Tesco and Morrisons have banned Chinese CCTV cameras from their stores amid concerns over their security and ethical risks.

As reported by The Telegraph, Morrisons has joined the UK’s largest supermarket chain in removing equipment supplied by Hikvision and Dahua over their alleged involvement in the suppression of the Uyghur Muslim minority residing in north-west China.

Marks & Spencer said it did not have any Hikvision cameras in any of its stores as part of its policy to ensure its supply chains were “sustainable and ethical and that human rights are respected”.


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Hikvision has been banned from supplying its technology in the US after being judged an unacceptable risk to national security. Under Chinese law, companies must “support, assist and co-operate” with state intelligence work.

The supermarkets revealed their decision was made in response to pressure from campaign groups led by Big Brother Watch.

Hikvision and Dahua provide technology “that facilitates the persecution and oppression of ethnic and religious groups in the Uyghur region, Tibet and Hong Kong and have no place in the UK”, they told The Telegraph.

“These cameras also give rise to serious security concerns, given their links to the Chinese state and their history of security flaws.”

Morrisons said it was “committed to the protection and advancement of human rights in our supply chain and we take this issue very seriously”.

Because of ethical concerns over Hikvision, the store said it had stopped purchasing the company’s CCTV cameras in 2022 and had “transitioned to a new supplier whose devices we are phasing in”.

Tesco said it had taken immediate action to identify alternative suppliers as soon as it became aware of alleged “human rights abuses” involving the firms.

Big Brother Watch legal and policy officer Madeleine Stone said: “Hikvision and Dahua are closely linked to grave human rights abuses across China and their AI-powered CCTV poses a risk to the privacy and security of the British public.

“As British retailers are starting to strip out these rights-abusing surveillance companies from the high street, the Government is trailing behind by refusing to take action. Hikvision and Dahua have no place in the UK.”

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