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China trying to 'undermine' US judicial system: Justice chief By Paul HANDLEY Washington (AFP) Oct 25, 2022 Top US justice officials accused the Chinese government Monday of an unrelenting campaign by intelligence operatives to subvert the American justice system and steal commercial secrets. Attorney General Merrick Garland and FBI Director Christopher Wray detailed three separate cases in which Beijing's spies allegedly harassed dissidents inside the United States, tried to interfere in the prosecution of a Chinese telecoms giant understood to be Huawei, and pressured US academics to work for them. Thirteen Chinese nationals who allegedly worked for Beijing's spy agencies have been indicted in the cases and two of them have been arrested. The cases showed that China "sought to interfere with the rights and freedoms of individuals in the United States and to undermine our judicial system that protects those rights," said Garland. "The Justice Department will not tolerate attempts by any foreign power to undermine the rule of law upon which our democracy is based," the top US law enforcement officer said. Garland, Wray, and other top justice officials spoke about the cases in a press conference in Washington one day after Xi Jinping secured a historic third term as China's leader. US officials have tied Xi to what they see as a growing effort by Chinese intelligence agencies over the past decade to steal US intellectual property and to crack down on Chinese political dissidents in the United States. Asked whether the announcements Monday were timed to Xi's confirmation as the Chinese Communist Party's all-powerful general secretary on Sunday, Wray avoided any specific link. "We bring cases when they're ready. And that's probably the simplest answer and most straightforward answer to that, as far as what signal they send," the FBI chief said. "If the Chinese government, the Chinese Communist Party, continues to violate our laws, they are going to keep encountering the FBI," he said. - Huawei case interference - In a case cited Monday but unveiled last week, seven Chinese nationals allegedly tried to force a US resident to go back to China. Two people were arrested, but five others -- all allegedly employees of Chinese intelligence agencies -- remain at large, likely in China. In the second case, two Chinese intelligence officials working from China tried to recruit a US government employee to provide them inside information on the Justice Department's prosecution of Huawei. In 2019 Huawei was charged with a systematic campaign to steal US trade secrets, sanctions evasion and other counts. The two agents believed they had recruited a US government official to work for them and paid the person $61,000 worth of bitcoin to supply internal documents related to the case against Huawei. But the informant was in fact a double agent who worked with the FBI on the case. The third case involved Chinese intelligence operatives who worked for the Ministry of State Security posing as academics to recruit operatives in the United States. From 2008 to at least 2018, they targeted professors, former security officials and others with access to sensitive information and technology for recruitment. "In all three of these cases, and frankly, in thousands of others, we found the Chinese government threatening established democratic norms and the rule of law as they work to undermine US economic security and fundamental human rights," said Wray. The US Justice Department has announced at least a half-dozen similar cases against alleged Chinese intelligence officers so far this year. Wray said the threat is constant, and that the FBI opens a Chinese counterintelligence investigation "about every 12 hours." In response to the announcements, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said "China has always asked its citizens to obey the laws and regulations of the countries they are in." "Some people in US law enforcement... have openly provided shelter for Chinese fugitives and obstructed China's efforts to chase down fugitives, turning the US into a safe haven for the corrupt and for lawbreakers," Wang told reporters at a routine briefing.
US charges alleged Chinese spies in telecoms case The Justice Department charged He Guochun and Wang Zheng with obstruction of justice, and He with money laundering, after they allegedly paid a US informant they believed they had recruited $61,000 worth of bitcoin to supply internal documents related to the case against the company. The indictment did not name the company, calling it a global telecommunications firm based in China. The details of the case are similar to that of Huawei, the Chinese telecommunications giant charged in 2019 with stealing trade secrets, sanctions evasion and other counts. The indictment said that He and Wang believed they had recruited a person in a US law enforcement agency, and asked the person to obtain confidential information on witnesses, trial evidence and possible new charges against the telecommunications company. He and Wang thought they recruited their source in 2017, but the person "subsequently began working as a double agent for the US government" and worked under FBI supervision, the indictment said. Beginning in January 2019, the month charges were first announced against Huawei, the two Chinese agents repeatedly asked the informant for inside information "in an effort to interfere with the prosecution," it said. The US added fresh charges in February 2020, and as the case built, in 2021 the two agents stepped up their requests for internal documents from the prosecution team. The FBI crafted fake documents with "secret" classifications to be passed to the agents. For one document He paid the person $41,000 worth of bitcoin last year. The agents indicated that the information they were getting was being passed to the telecommunications company, and that the company was aware of the spying operation. The cooperation continued through 2022, with He paying the informant another $20,000 worth of bitcoin earlier this month, according to the Justice Department.
China social media users beg for accounts back after protest ban Beijing (AFP) Oct 17, 2022 Dozens of Chinese internet users have posted desperate pleas for access to their WeChat app accounts after hundreds were banned for posts about a rare street protest in Beijing against President Xi Jinping. The app is critical to daily life in China, allowing hundreds of millions of people to communicate, make payments, take part in Covid contact tracing and access entertainment, but it is also heavily surveilled by the state. Hundreds of WeChat users have had their accounts blocked, some perman ... read more
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