National Post (National Edition)

Fingers point to Beijing after break-ins target New Zealand professor

China accused of ‘intimidati­ng’ critic into silence

- Charlotte Graham-m Clay

WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND • A burglary targeting a New Zealand professor who has examined the Chinese Communist Party’s influence in Western countries has drawn the interest of Interpol and other police agencies.

Prof. Anne-Marie Brady, a China specialist at the University of Canterbury in Christchur­ch, said her home was burglarize­d in February while she and her family were out. The thief or thieves ignored a glass jar of cash and other valuables, she said, in favour of an “old, broken” laptop, on which she had conducted her most recent research, and a “cheap” cellphone the professor had used on travels to China.

Analysts said there was strong circumstan­tial evidence that agents of Beijing were responsibl­e.

Peter Mattis, a former CIA analyst and now a China Program fellow at the Jamestown Foundation, said the burglary, along with previous break-ins at her office, meant there was “only one likely culprit for this,” referring to China.

Brady’s high profile on matters of China’s influence worldwide meant “intimidati­ng her into silence would in a sense be a major win” for the country, he said.

Brady’s recent paper, Magic Weapons, was published last September. It identified categories of political-influence activities by China in Western democracie­s, laid out what Brady said was the Chinese Communist Party’s blueprint for conducting such activities worldwide, and examined New Zealand as a case study of Chinese influence across most spheres of public life.

When Brady returned home on the day of the burglary, bed covers were rumpled and papers strewn about, but her husband’s laptop was left untouched. She said that it appeared to be a “psychologi­cal operation” and the latest in a series of incidents targeting her over her work. She said her computer’s hard drive had been tampered with when she was previously in China, and that Communist Party officials questioned people she spoke with there.

Before the February burglary, she said, she received a letter warning her she would be attacked.

Clive Hamilton, a professor at Charles Sturt University in Canberra and author of a book on China’s influence in Australia, said that if evidence emerged that Chinese agents were involved in the burglary and office break-ins, it should act as “a cattle prod to the New Zealand body politic” about its relationsh­ip with Beijing.

That relationsh­ip has come under scrutiny over the past year among the Five Eyes intelligen­ce sharing partnershi­p, of which New Zealand is a member, along with Canada, the United States, Britain and Australia.

Brady’s paper was published around the time that a New Zealand lawmaker, Jian Yang, was forced to deny he had been a Chinese spy. Yang, who said he had merely taught English to spies in China, remains in Parliament.

At the time Brady’s paper was published, New Zealand’s political leaders played down its findings, but those findings struck a chord globally. Her paper was cited in government committee hearings in the United States and Australia — which in June introduced national security legislatio­n banning foreign interferen­ce in politics. Brady said she had received “more requests to speak around the world than I could fulfil in a lifetime.”

After the report’s release, Brady’s office at the university was broken into. After her house was burglarize­d in February, police began investigat­ing two previous breakins at her workplace.

New Zealand police said in a statement that Interpol was aiding in their investigat­ion. The New Zealand Herald reported that the country’s Security Intelligen­ce Service, which has a counteresp­ionage mandate, was also involved in the inquiry and had swept Brady’s office for listening devices. But the agency itself declined to comment.

Paul Buchanan, a former Pentagon analyst who is the director of 36th Parallel Assessment­s, a security consultanc­y in Auckland, New Zealand, said the involvemen­t of Interpol and the local security service meant that the perpetrato­rs of the burglary and break-ins “are abroad at this moment, or are agents of a foreign entity.”

“Everything in the New Zealand government’s response points to a state, a state-sponsored entity, or a foreign criminal organizati­on being involved with this,” he said.

Members of the China research community in the United States and Australia said they were rattled by the case and had beefed up their own security because of it.

“People advising me on my security have been quite alarmed,” Hamilton, the Australian academic, said of the burglary of Brady’s home. “If China is targeting her, there’s a good chance they’re targeting me.”

The Chinese Embassy in New Zealand’s capital, Wellington, declined to comment on the case.

Brady said the government’s silence was “starting to look like procrastin­ation.”

She said New Zealand’s government needed to reach a “level of respect” in its relationsh­ip with China “where we can point out things we don’t like.”

EVERYTHING IN THE NEW ZEALAND GOVERNMENT’S RESPONSE POINTS TO A STATE, A STATE-SPONSORED ENTITY, OR A FOREIGN CRIMINAL ORGANIZATI­ON BEING INVOLVED WITH THIS.

— PAUL BUCHANAN

 ?? UNIVERSITY OF CANTERBURY ?? Analysts say that Professor Anne-Marie Brady’s focus on the Chinese Communist Party’s growing influence overseas may have prompted the February burglary of her home.
UNIVERSITY OF CANTERBURY Analysts say that Professor Anne-Marie Brady’s focus on the Chinese Communist Party’s growing influence overseas may have prompted the February burglary of her home.
 ?? MARTY MELVILLE / GETTY IMAGES ?? A recent burglary at the home of a university professor could threaten relations between China and New Zealand.
MARTY MELVILLE / GETTY IMAGES A recent burglary at the home of a university professor could threaten relations between China and New Zealand.

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