Current:Home > BackUK resists calls to label China a threat following claims a Beijing spy worked in Parliament-LoTradeCoin
UK resists calls to label China a threat following claims a Beijing spy worked in Parliament
View Date:2024-12-24 01:58:37
LONDON (AP) — The British government on Monday resisted calls to label China a threat to the U.K. following the revelation that a researcher in Parliament was arrested earlier this year on suspicion of spying for Beijing.
U.K. Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch said Britain should avoid calling China a “foe” or using language that could “escalate” tensions.
“China is a country that we do a lot of business with,” Badenoch told Sky News. “China is a country that is significant in terms of world economics. It sits on the U.N. Security Council. We certainly should not be describing China as a foe, but we can describe it as a challenge.”
Tensions between Britain and China have risen in recent years over accusations of economic subterfuge, human rights abuses and Beijing’s crackdown on civil liberties in the former British colony of Hong Kong.
Britain’s governing Conservatives are divided on how tough a line to take and on how much access Chinese firms should have to the U.K. economy. More hawkish Tories want Beijing declared a threat, rather than simply a challenge, the word Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has used.
Under Britain’s new National Security Act, if China were officially labeled a threat, anyone working “at the direction” of Beijing or for a state-linked firm would have to register and disclose their activities or risk jail.
Conservative hawks renewed their calls for a tougher stance after the Metropolitan Police force confirmed over the weekend that a man in his 20s and a man in his 30s were arrested in March under the Official Secrets Act. Neither has been charged, and both were released on bail until October pending further inquiries.
The Sunday Times reported that the younger man was a parliamentary researcher who worked with senior Conservative Party lawmakers and held a pass that allowed full access to the Parliament buildings.
The researcher, whom police have not publicly named, maintained in a statement released by his lawyers Monday that he is “completely innocent.”
“I have spent my career to date trying to educate others about the challenge and threats presented by the Chinese Communist Party,” the researcher said in the statement. “To do what has been claimed against me in extravagant news reporting would be against everything I stand for.”
A Chinese Embassy statement called the allegations “completely fabricated and nothing but malicious slander.” China urges “relevant parties in the U.K. to stop their anti-China political manipulation,” the statement said.
Sunak chided Chinese Premier Li Qiang over the alleged espionage when the two met at a Group of 20 summit in India on Sunday. Sunak told British broadcasters in New Delhi that he’d expressed “my very strong concerns about any interference in our parliamentary democracy, which is obviously unacceptable.”
But he said it was important to engage with China rather than “carping from the sidelines.”
U.K. spy services have sounded ever-louder warnings about Beijing’s covert activities. In November, the head of the MI5 domestic intelligence agency, Ken McCallum, said “the activities of the Chinese Communist Party pose the most game-changing strategic challenge to the U.K.” Foreign intelligence chief Richard Moore of MI6 said in July that China was his agency’s “single most important strategic focus.”
In January 2022, MI5 issued a rare public alert, saying a London-based lawyer was trying to “covertly interfere in U.K. politics” on behalf of the Chinese Communist Party. The agency alleged attorney Christine Lee was acting in coordination with the Chinese ruling party’s United Front Work Department, an organization known to exert Chinese influence abroad.
Alex Younger, the former chief of British foreign intelligence agency MI6, said the U.K.'s relationship with China is complicated.
“We’ve got to find ways of engaging with it, and find ways of cooperating with it in important areas like climate change, and sometimes we have to be absolutely prepared to confront it when we believe that our security interests are threatened,” Younger told the BBC.
“In my experience, just being nice to them doesn’t get you very far,” he added.
veryGood! (32)
Related
- Chet Holmgren injury update: Oklahoma City Thunder star suffers hip fracture
- Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge shows price pressures continuing to cool
- Global climate talks begin in Dubai, with an oil executive in charge
- In 'The Boy and the Heron,' Miyazaki asks: How do we go on in the midst of grief?
- Wildfires burn on both coasts. Is climate change to blame?
- AP Week in Pictures: Latin America and Caribbean
- Hungary will not agree to starting EU membership talks with Ukraine, minister says
- A Dutch court orders Greenpeace activists to leave deep-sea mining ship in the South Pacific
- Trump pledged to roll back protections for transgender students. They’re flooding crisis hotlines
- J.J. Watt – yes, that J.J. Watt – broke the news of Zach Ertz's split from the Cardinals
Ranking
- Halle Berry Rocks Sheer Dress She Wore to 2002 Oscars 22 Years Later
- For a male sexual assault survivor, justice won in court does not equal healing
- Schools across the U.S. will soon be able to order free COVID tests
- AP PHOTOS: Indelible images of 2023, coming at us with the dizzying speed of a world in convulsion
- Mississippi rising, Georgia falling in college football NCAA Re-Rank 1-134 after Week 11
- Lead water pipes still pose a health risk across America. The EPA wants to remove them all
- House on Zillow Gone Wild wins 'most unique way to show off your car collection'
- Countries promise millions for damages from climate change. So how would that work?
Recommendation
-
Diamond Sports Group can emerge out of bankruptcy after having reorganization plan approved
-
Why hold UN climate talks 28 times? Do they even matter?
-
Rep. George Santos remains defiant as House to vote on expulsion this week
-
Google this week will begin deleting inactive accounts. Here's how to save yours.
-
Five best fits for Alex Bregman: Will Astros homegrown star leave as free agent?
-
Millions of seniors struggle to afford housing — and it's about to get a lot worse
-
Massachusetts lawmakers consider funding temporary shelter for homeless migrant families
-
Ex-health secretary Matt Hancock defends his record at UK’s COVID inquiry