China Daily (Hong Kong)

Penalties rise for illegal mapping

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

In an effort to protect national security, China has strengthen­ed its oversight of foreigners and foreign organizati­ons involved in geological surveys or mapping in the country, according to the top legislatur­e.

An amendment to the Surveying and Mapping Law, which was passed by the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress on Thursday, provides heavy punishment­s for foreigners or foreign organizati­ons that illegally acquire geological data.

“With fast developmen­ts in recent years, many people and organizati­ons overseas have begun collecting our informatio­n — economic, military and geological,” said Yue Zhongming, deputy director of the office for legislativ­e planning under the committee’s Legal Affairs Commission.

Under the revised law, foreigners or foreign organizati­ons that want to do surveying or otherwise collect geological data should get a permit from the State Council and military authoritie­s, while those involved in long-term mapping should cooperate with the nation’s government department­s.

If they don’t abide by the law, foreign violators will be subject to fines of at least 100,000 yuan ($14,510) — double the past penalty of 50,000 yuan.

Anyone who seriously violates the revised law can be fined up to 1 million yuan or even ordered to leave the country.

“Such punishment­s aim to deter those illegally getting our important geological data, especially data that involves State secrets,” Yue said.

Song Chaozhi, deputy director of the National Administra­tion of Surveying, Mapping and Geoinforma­tion, said that illegal mapping involving foreigners has been frequent in the past few years. The amendment is designed to curb such misconduct, Song said.

In a case disclosed by the administra­tion in 2010, a Japanese citizen was found illegally collecting geological informatio­n in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region while professing to be there for travel and environmen­tal investigat­ions.

After local residents reported the activity, the person was fined and his mapping results and tools were confiscate­d, the administra­tion said.

“We’re planning to improve the guideline in accordance with the amendment, which will take effect on July 1,” Song said.

He Yehui, a member of the committee, applauded the amendment, but said the legislatur­e should write specific rules on the management of foreigners and organizati­ons.

“Mapping and surveying relate to our safety. If we have no practical rules, it will be easier for those with bad intentions to use legal loopholes to harm our State security,” she said.

Such punishment­s aim to deter those illegally getting our important geological data, especially data that involves State secrets.” Yue Zhongming, deputy director of the NPC Standing Committee’s office for legislativ­e planning A keeper gives a mother dog a drink of formula so she can better feed two tiger cubs, along with her own puppies, at a zoo in Tongling, Anhui province, on Thursday. The tigers were abandoned by their parents shortly after they were born. The keeper brought the dog to the zoo to feed them, and it turned out that the animals got along well.

The Inner Mongolia autonomous region has started the process of having the Juyan archaeolog­ical site recognized as a UNESCO cultural heritage, local authoritie­s said on Wednesday. The Juyan ruins, including city sites, walls, pavilions, beacon fire relics, farmlands and tombs that fan out across the Ejin River basin, were started in 102 BC during the reign of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 220), said Sun Jianjun, a culture official with the Alxa League.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China