The New Zealand Herald

CHINESE SPY CLAIMS OVER NATIONAL MP – NEW TWIST

Military institutio­ns where spies received training not listed in citizenshi­p applicatio­n

- Nicholas Jones

ANational MP who taught English to Chinese spies didn’t declare the names of the military institutio­ns where that happened to New Zealand authoritie­s.

Jian Yang told the Herald he didn’t name the Air Force Engineerin­g University or Luoyang People’s Liberation Army University of Foreign Languages when making the applicatio­ns that led to New Zealand citizenshi­p, which he was granted in 2004.

He instead gave the names of two Chinese universiti­es for civilians that had “partnershi­p” status with the military institutio­ns where he taught intelligen­ce agency cadets as an English lecturer.

Asked if he made a false declaratio­n on his citizenshi­p applicatio­n, Yang said giving the name of “partnershi­p” universiti­es instead of the institutes he worked and studied at was not a false declaratio­n and was required if he was to leave China.

“It is not a false declaratio­n. When I left China I was asked by the system to use my partnershi­p universiti­es. That is why I used those universiti­es in applying for jobs, even [at] the University of Auckland.

“That’s my CV. It is not that I am deliberate­ly trying to cover-up. It’s because the system asked me to use the partner university. That is the reason,” Yang said.

“When I left China I was told, basically, ‘ use your partnershi­p university’. And I did that. And ever since then, I stick with my partner university . . . China in those years was closed.

“It was over 20 years ago . . . they asked the military — people working in the military or studying in the military — when they leave China [to] use your partnershi­p university. So that’s what we did.”

Making a false declaratio­n is both a serious legal and political matter. Metiria Turei resigned as Greens coleader after revelation­s including that she made a false electoral declaratio­n in the 1990s.

The Herald asked Yang about his citizenshi­p applicatio­n after he held a press conference yesterday. A spokesman for National Party leader Bill English said Yang had been transparen­t about his associatio­n with the Chinese military system.

“We are now nine days out from an election and the Prime Minister is focused on that. If anyone has an issue they can raise it with the Department of Internal Affairs.

“We would expect the Department of Internal Affairs to treat Dr Yang the same as any other citizen.”

Yang yesterday denounced an investigat­ion into his past published by Newsroom as defamatory and a smear campaign. It reported the NZSIS has scrutinise­d Yang over three years and interviewe­d a person about the MP last year.

Yang said he had never spoken to the NZSIS and wasn’t aware of any inquiries. For the record, he said he had never been a spy and the implicatio­n he had been was defamatory.

He said he had been transparen­t about his past with the National Party and it was widely known in the Chinese community. Yang said the military institutio­ns he attended taught English and not intelligen­ce training. He was a civilian officer in the military without ranking.

He was asked if he was aware that while working as a lecturer he was teaching English to people training to be intelligen­ce officers, so they could monitor communicat­ions.

“If you define those cadets or students as spies, yes, then I was teaching spies. If that is the case. I don’t think so [they were spies]. I just think they are collecting informatio­n through communicat­ion in China. If you define that way, then they were spies. But for us, it was just collecting informatio­n.”

Yang agreed when he was asked if his students were using the English they were learning to monitor the communicat­ions of other countries.

He moved to New Zealand in 1999 and taught internatio­nal relations at the University of Auckland, after attending the Australian National University in Canberra in 1994. He entered Parliament in 2011.

English told media yesterday Yang had been upfront with the National Party about his past.

“I think from early on I’ve been aware that he had military training including military intelligen­ce,” English said.

The National Party released to media a CV it said was provided by Yang to New Zealand’s Embassy in China in 2012, as background for a visit. It included his time at the engineerin­g university and language institute.

Yang was a member of Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Defence and Trade committee from November 2014 until March last year. He is number 33 on the party list ahead of next week’s election.

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HWatch the video at nzherald.co.nz National MP Jian Yang says an

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