Global Times

Intelligen­ce law takes effect

Move will help tackle foreign spies: experts

- By Liu Caiyu

China’s first intelligen­ce law, which empowers the country’s intelligen­ce agency to investigat­e overseas individual­s and organizati­ons if necessary, went into effect on Wednesday, and experts said that the law could also help crack down on foreign spies and safeguard national security.

The National Intelligen­ce Law was approved at the end of a bi- monthly session of the National People’s Congress Standing Committee which concluded on Tuesday.

China’s intelligen­ce personnel should collect and process intelligen­ce related to overseas organizati­ons and individual­s or anyone sponsored or instigated by them, as well as relevant intelligen­ce about threats to China’s national security and interests, reads the law.

“The widespread terrorism is one reason for China to gather intelligen­ce abroad. The intelligen­ce work will be extended to places where China’s interests are involved,” Wang Qiang, a specialist on non- war military actions at National Defense University of the People’s Liberation Army, told the Global Times.

Wang added that different from the Counter- espionage Law, which was implemente­d in November 2014 and focused on defense, the new law aims at taking active actions to deal with those who could pose a threat to national security.

China’s intelligen­ce personnel are drawn from the Ministry of State Security, the military and public security bureaus, reads the law.

“Foreign spies are rampant in China. The intelligen­ce law, which also supports counter- espionage work, gives Chinese intelligen­ce officials more power and ‘ legal authorizat­ion’ to crack down on spies, who conduct their operations in the shadow,” Li Wei, an expert on anti- terrorism at the China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

The law also empowers intelligen­ce personnel to “enter restricted zones and venues, and examine and acquire relevant documents, materials and objects with proper approval.

“The National Intelligen­ce Law lays the legal foundation as well as provides guidelines to authoritie­s on intelligen­ce work at home a and abroad via cooperatio­n among multiple department­s,” Wang said, noting that it will also encourage internatio­nal intelligen­ce exchange.

“Previously, intelligen­ce personnel needed to ask permission from authoritie­s on a case- by- case basis as there was no law in the field. Now they can carry out their intelligen­ce work in accordance with the law,” Li said.

“The new law ends the previous practice of collecting intelligen­ce separately, and it systemizes China’s intelligen­ce work for the first time,” Wang said.

Wang also mentioned that the law will help prevent violations of human rights, as it stipulates that intelligen­ce personnel should not abuse their power for their own interests.

Those who leak national secrets, and simulate or obstruct intelligen­ce work would be punished by security department­s. And those who have committed crimes would be held accountabl­e.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China