Monday, August 10, 2009

India take control of coastal surveillance in Sri Lanka via Barnas International Private Limited

India Government in a bid to strengthen its power base in Indian Ocean, won a coastal surveillance project in Sri Lanka via Barnas International Private Limited, security analysts said. Barnas International Private Limited, which has bagged a 30 million Sri Lankan rupee contract to provide surveillance solutions in the Sri Lankan capital, will also take up similar projects in the island's northern regions that had recently been wrested from the LTTE, company sources here told to an indian media.


Under the project, the entire Sri Lankan coast will come under a specially- designed surveillance system with sophisticated thermal-imaging cameras and a software that can detect the nature of the moving object. "Thermal-imaging cameras, unlike conventional ones, are so powerful that they can pick up images from distances nearly 20 km into the sea. A specially-designed software will analyse the nature of the images and sound out an alarm in the central control centre when a boat or ship approaches the coast," Barnas vice-president Sivaji Rao, who is taking care of the Sri Lankan operations, told to an indian media.
He said the Sri Lankan government had realised the difficulty of monitoring the entire coast manually and gone in for an unmanned surveillance system.Sivaji Rao said the Sri Lankan government was worried about the security situation and had embarked on the project of enhancing its surveillance systems on a war footing."Apart from providing coastal security, all sensitive areas will be brought under strict surveillance under the project. We are not using conventional cameras and digital video recorders here but are using highly sophisticated and specially-designed equipment and software.
All the cameras involved will be internet-enabled and can be monitored by senior officials even when they are on the move through cell phones and laptops," Sivaji Rao added.The company will also be taking up similar projects in the war-ravaged northern parts.

http://www.tamilsydney.com/content/view/2361/37/

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