My Lord, you need to stand up!

Chapter 914 All the planning ultimately comes down to business.

Chapter 914 All plans ultimately come down to business.

The most troublesome aspect of crowd management is that when people are mixed together, they cannot be filtered or distinguished, making it impossible to handle the situation.

Wei Dong's suggestion was precisely a simple and crude method.

Finding a place for these South Asian refugees to live permanently would significantly reduce the difficulty of managing them.

There is even a possibility that they will be completely uprooted and relocated.

This basketball association president is quite ruthless.

Keep it close when you need it, and don't mind using it as a rag to clean it all up afterward.

The police thus arrived at a definition of Rang Weidong's overall image.

Of course, the biggest impression was how professional they were!

Because when you hear terms like "electronic checkpoint," you're bound to ask what it is.

Wei Dong then brought out his familiar surveillance network model: "Hong Kong has a relatively high police-to-police ratio, and there are police officers patrolling the streets at any time. But no matter how many people there are, they can't compare to cameras. Using cameras to assist in patrolling and monitoring many remote areas, a police officer can monitor and observe dozens of corners while sitting in an office with the air conditioning on. Isn't that a huge improvement in efficiency? Moreover, the recorded footage can also be used as evidence."

Surveillance cameras began to be used in Europe and America in the early 1980s.

Hong Kong will definitely follow suit.

However, the construction of such facilities is limited to important locations such as wealthy merchants' courtyards and officials' residences, and there is not enough public space.

Not to mention full coverage, remote areas were hardly cared about at all.

Now, hearing this will surely give you a sense of sudden enlightenment.

Qin Yuye certainly didn't expect that her husband would turn this negotiation into a business deal in the end:

"To be honest, when I came to Hong Kong last year, I noticed that there was a huge demand for this kind of product here, and the demand is even greater in the mainland. So I imported a large number of CCD sensors from Hong Kong to Shenzhen and opened a factory that produces tens or hundreds of thousands of surveillance cameras a year. I sell them to the mainland police department at about one-fifth to one-tenth of the price abroad. What are the consequences of this?"

He's even started using questions and answers to attract attention.

Even the two officials who were originally standing behind him like the two guardian generals couldn't help but move closer to hear what the foreign director was asking.

"Increase the density! Originally, there was only one camera facing this basketball court. Now, with three or five cameras at different angles, the control would be much stronger. With two or three hundred cameras in the entire police academy, five or six people on duty could keep an all-round, no-blind-spot view of the whole district or the whole city."

Now that he owns a factory, Wei Dong is quite familiar with it: "The problem now is that the coaxial cable transmission distance is only 500 meters, but at least this monitoring center can completely control the area within a 500-meter radius. Why don't you give it a try? I'll donate 200 sets of camera probes and recording equipment to the police academy first, and you can install and test them yourselves. It'll be great!"

For a police department with an annual budget of hundreds of millions of Hong Kong dollars, two hundred cameras and video recording devices are really nothing.

But Wei Dong had drawn them a map of a new world, and they were incredibly excited: "Is it really that effective?"

Qin Yuye almost burst out laughing; she could tell from his tone.

Wei Dong gestured with an expert air: "What are the benefits of establishing a complete and seamless surveillance video system? For example, if a criminal runs along the street, you can keep searching by taking turns using each camera until you can eventually find his whereabouts."

The three senior police officials must have realized that this was a huge leap forward in police strategy: "How many cameras would it take to achieve seamless surveillance?"

Let Wei Dong be essentially an excellent salesman: "At first, you focus on key subordinates, and then gradually build up a network. It's a long-term project, but it will definitely generate profits from the beginning. For example, last year I encountered a robbery and murder case on the highway from Yuezhou to Pengzhen..."

He recounted the story vividly: "Afterwards, the police installed the surveillance cameras we provided at that intersection, and we've also installed and are currently testing the Pengzhen vehicle entry and exit system, which uses a computerized electronic checkpoint entry system..."

Then another high-ranking foreign official standing behind him realized: "Did you design the vehicle management system for the Pengzhen Port recently?"

Wei Dong nodded: "Yes, suppose a car drives from Hong Kong to Pengzhen, then secretly brings the license plate back, and then drives it up in another car, wouldn't that be easy to smuggle? That's why there's strict control and prohibition of Hong Kong vehicles from entering. But the actual commercial and economic demand is huge. Computers can replace handwritten records of license plates. There's no need to flip through notebooks to see when they enter and exit; the records will pop up automatically. The key is that as long as it can be automatically recognized, it can effectively prevent staff from engaging in favoritism and fraud..."

It is very clear.

What started as a questioning exercised with ideological reservations has quickly transformed into a technical discussion within the industry.

Of course, these people already had a stereotype about Rang Weidong's actual identity.

His demeanor and attitude suggest that he is more than just a businessman.

In fact, Wei Dong was exposed to all sorts of people in Beijing and Shanghai.

How much respect should we have for a municipal police chief like you?

It's at best equivalent to a municipality directly under the central government.

When the firefighters' basketball team took to the court, they were still soundly defeated.

An agreement has been reached that Weidong will donate 500 sets of surveillance systems including cameras, recorders, and monitors, along with installation instructions, and a vehicle electronic checkpoint management system.

The police force did not have to pay anything, but "unintentionally revealed" that Wei Tung had an abandoned mountain village a few kilometers away from Sha Tin Harbour.

It is very small and has been uninhabited for many years, but you can buy the land from the original residents who have moved to nearby villages and towns.

This kind of mountainous land, which has no potential for development and is generally not approved for construction, is very cheap.

Wei Dong instructed Hesheng to contact them for the purchase the following day.

It's just a few houses that resemble a farmhouse, and there's not even any road access. The nearest walking path is several kilometers away, so only city dwellers would travel such a long distance to go there for a spring outing or adventure.

It's more convenient to get outside by yacht or speedboat. Then let's put it under Qin Zhiming's name.

Then he ordered Heshawen to take some men and go check it out.

Cheng Lang stated directly: "The master bought a piece of land. You should move all the women and children in Yuen Long to live there, and also set up a small supermarket at the village entrance."

City dwellers find it hard to imagine how a mountain valley with no infrastructure other than green hills and clear waters could survive.

When the poor, especially the refugee-like country bumpkins, landed, they all knelt down and wept, thanking the sir and the river god...

At that moment, the South Asian commander truly felt immense pride and unwavering loyalty to his master.

His rise from a garbage collector to his current status is all thanks to the master!

In fact, many shantytowns are hidden in those remote and remote mountain valleys of Hong Kong.

The refugees who landed at various locations since the start of the War of Resistance against Japan were mainly concentrated on the western front.

Because to the east there is only the inland area.

As a result, these South Asian refugees are often bullied by various ethnic groups around them, their homes are inspected by the police, and they are even forced to pay protection money for their dilapidated shacks.

Previously, they mostly lived as rats, hiding and running around in a large shantytown.

They are among the lowest of the refugees.

No one had ever imagined that bringing them together could even put them against Xin'an.

Now you can live openly in the sunlight and even build your own house. Doesn't that feel like a rebirth?

Anyway, the master didn't know how they got there.

It's obvious that the South Asian guys on the construction site are working even harder.

No wonder places like Citibank and Dubai love to use illegal immigrants as laborers; they'd be grateful even if they were given a little bit of dirt.

His wife was very satisfied and even considered opening a garment factory in the mountain village.

Wei Dong quickly grabbed her.

When South Asian men come to work on construction sites, regardless of whether they have obtained a residence permit like Ha Sawen, the construction site can pretend not to know and push all the blame onto the foreman who recruits the workers and the labor service company established by Ha Sawen.

This is all part of the unspoken, illegal labor economy on construction sites.

"If you open a garment factory directly in an area where illegal immigrants live, wouldn't that be suspected of actively and deliberately employing illegal immigrants?"

Even when Wei Dong was walking through a chaotic construction site, he still knew to reach out and support his wife.

Qin Yuye suddenly spoke up: "You are not allowed to learn Cantonese, nor are you allowed to learn English!"

Wei Dong was taken aback and asked why. When he looked up and saw his wife's coquettish expression, he realized what she meant: "You just want to monopolize this translation position, huh? Fine, fine, no problem."

Qin Yuye sighed: "What else can I do? I want to be with you every day, but I also want to have my own career that is valuable to you. When are you going back to Jiangzhou?"

Before Wei Dong could respond, a figure suddenly sprang up and pounced on the workers who were engrossed in their work just two or three meters away!
He had made it clear to the Commissioner of Police that while the overall security situation in Hong Kong was good at the moment, the gangs were really lawless, and the danger of kidnapping a tycoon was something Wei Dong kept in mind.

The couple now travels in two cars, one in front and one behind, and when they walk, they are surrounded by five or six Taoist priests and nuns for protection.

The construction site of the TV station was muddy and messy, which made them slightly separated.

Someone immediately turned around and rushed over.

Wei Dong, who was also agile from playing basketball every day, grabbed his wife and pulled her behind him.

At the same time, he suddenly stepped back, making way for the Taoist priests behind him to rush up as well.

I also had an unconscious urge to touch my waist. It feels so strange not having a gun.

As a result, neither of the two agile Taoist priests could stop this figure!

Because there was no attack, but rather a sudden rush forward with the force to shake mountains and rivers, he knelt down and kowtowed, speaking in a Sichuan accent: "Comrade, please give me a chance to stay..."

Qin Yuye squeezed behind her husband with a sweet smile and peeked out: "Oh my, he sounds like he's from your hometown..."

Wei Dong made it very clear: "No, it's more about the Yunnan-Guizhou side. Stand up and speak properly!"

Because Shen Cuiyue never speaks Mandarin, and Wei Dong and Dong Xueqing don't like to use it either, Qin Yuye mostly learned Mandarin conversations through the local dialect after arriving in Jiangzhou.

Now the couple doesn't speak Mandarin in private.

Walking on the construction site where few people could understand, with no privacy whatsoever.

Who would have thought that a mainland illegal immigrant was hiding here?

Hu Yongbin, whose face was covered in mud and dirt, had been working among South Asian laborers for over a year!
Who said that smuggling oneself into Hong Kong is paradise on earth?

(End of this chapter)

Tap the screen to use advanced tools Tip: You can use left and right keyboard keys to browse between chapters.

You'll Also Like