More eyes on Hyderabad: Government to step up CCTV surveillance

With 3L cameras, Hyderabad is 16th most surveilled city in the world

October 11, 2020 01:06 am | Updated 11:32 am IST - HYDERABAD

CCTV cameras near Gudimalkapur market are defunct, even while the State government has issued orders for installation of more cameras at various points in the city. Nagara Gopal

CCTV cameras near Gudimalkapur market are defunct, even while the State government has issued orders for installation of more cameras at various points in the city. Nagara Gopal

The sixteenth most snooped city in the world, Hyderabad is in the process of climbing up a few more notches, with the Telangana government issuing express orders to install CCTV cameras at several more locations and vantage points in the metropolis.

In a recent survey conducted by a UK firm Comparitech, Hyderabad with its three lakh public CCTV cameras has bagged the dubious distinction of being the only Indian city in the top 20 most surveilled cities in the world. In fact, it is one of the two cities outside China, the other one being London. The survey mentioned in its report that little correlation was found between the number of public CCTV cameras and crime or safety aspect.

Unmindful of the observation and stressing that there have been studies establishing clear, direct correlation between CCTV surveillance and reduction in crime, the government has gone ahead with its mission of installation of more such third eyes.

Municipal Administration & Urban Development (MA&UD) Principal Secretary Arvind Kumar has issued the orders on Wednesday, directing GHMC and other urban local bodies (ULBs) within ORR, HMDA, HMRL, South Central Railway, TSRTC, TSIIC, HGCL, and several other departments, to install CCTV cameras at various locations. A blanket deadline of one month has been issued to all the departments for fulfilment of the orders.

While it has been stipulated that the cameras should be installed only in consultation with the Police department and integrated with the existing network of the Police, the responsibility of installation, operation and maintenance rests with the respective departments only. The Town Planning wing of the GHMC, and the Directorate of Country and Town Planning (DTCP) have been asked to insert mandatory provision for installation of surveillance cameras in the building permission rules under the TS-bPASS.

Accordingly, installation of the cameras will be made mandatory for all structures built in over 600 square yards of land, and all apartment complexes, shops though they are within the 600 square yards limit, besides all layouts.

Instructions have been issued to bring in all the proposed Integrated Township Projects too in the ambit immediately.

The exhaustive list of locations where camera surveillance has been made a norm include all notified slums, all 2BHK colonies, Basti Dawakhanas/UPHCs/government hospitals, metro rail stations and select pillars on metro routes, MMTS stations, railway stations, buses, bus depots, bus bays, bus shelters, entry points of all religious places, lakes and parks, vehicular underpasses, select locations on several roads, all IT parks, and institutional buildings within IT parks, comprehensive garbage transfer stations, all shelter homes, night shelters, orphanages, social welfare hostels, all paying guest accommodations, hostels, and educational institutions, all IALAs, petrol pumps, ORR interchanges, logistic parks, all wholesale markets, Rythu Bazars, and other retail outlets of the Marketing department, street vending zones, colony level offices of TSSPDCL, Mee Seva centres, all shop fronts, cabs run by cab aggregators, and even facades of public toilets by the road.

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