The mayor of New Paso (Southern Thessaran city, bordering Krean) in collaboration with the Secretary of Internal Affairs of the United States of Thessara has officially unveiled CIVITAS, a next-generation urban security and emergency-response system designed to protect major cities from afflicted outbreaks, infrastructure sabotage, and coordinated attacks against civilian populations.
The system, formally known as the Central Integrated Vigilance, Identification, Tracking & Alert System, will connect drone reconnaissance, municipal camera networks, traffic sensors, emergency dispatch centers, hospital alert systems, and military response units into a single live operational grid.
Officials described CIVITAS as one of the most significant public-safety projects launched since the Great Reset.
Speaking from New Paso’s City Hall, the Mayor framed the platform as a necessary evolution in urban protection, arguing that modern cities can no longer rely on fragmented emergency systems in an age of biological instability, refugee displacement, and asymmetric threats.
According to the Department of Civic Security and Urban Resilience, CIVITAS will allow authorities to detect afflicted movement through drone scouting, street-level camera feeds, thermal imaging, transport monitoring, and emergency calls. Once a potential threat is identified, the system can classify the risk level, trace movement across connected districts, alert nearby patrol units, reroute civilians, and create emergency evacuation corridors.
Officials emphasized that the technology is especially important for high-density areas such as metro stations, hospitals, schools, government buildings, refugee processing centers, and reconstruction zones.
The government also confirmed that CIVITAS will be deployed first in Thessarapolis before expanding to other strategic cities and Commonwealth-aligned urban centers situated in the United States of Thessara. Early deployment zones will include transport hubs, waterfront districts, medical corridors, and areas previously affected by afflicted incidents.
Supporters of the program argue that CIVITAS represents the practical application of Thessara’s governing doctrine, often referred to as the Mathematics of Peace. Under this doctrine, stability is maintained not only through military strength, but through prediction, coordination, infrastructure, and rapid intervention.
To its defenders, CIVITAS is a technological shield for a world still recovering from collapse.
However, the announcement has also raised concerns among civil liberties groups. Critics warn that a system capable of connecting cameras, drones, transport grids, and emergency databases could become one of the most powerful surveillance networks in the post-Reset world.
Opposition voices have questioned how the government will define an “afflicted threat,” who will have access to CIVITAS data, and whether the system could be used to monitor political dissent, protests, or foreign delegations under the language of security.
The Department of Civic Security and Urban Resilience rejected those concerns, stating that CIVITAS will operate under “strict civic protection protocols” and that its primary mission is to preserve life, maintain urban continuity, and prevent mass-casualty events.
Still, the deeper capabilities of the system remain unclear. Several defense sources have suggested that CIVITAS may include a classified threat-analysis layer known internally as the ORACLE Protocol, though the government has not publicly confirmed its existence.
For now, Thessara is presenting CIVITAS as a symbol of national resilience: a citywide nervous system built to ensure that the disasters of the Great Reset are never repeated.
The official launch campaign carries a simple message:
“When the city sees, the city survives.”