The New Zealand Herald

French spy fell for Chinese ‘honeytrap’

- Du Dimanche David Chazan in Paris Le Journal — Telegraph Group Ltd

A former French intelligen­ce agent facing treason charges was reportedly ensnared by a Chinese “honeytrap” when he began an affair with an interprete­r in Beijing, it has emerged.

The retired spy, named as Henri M, 71, and another former operative, Pierre-Marie H, 66, are accused of passing “informatio­n detrimenta­l to fundamenta­l national interests” to a foreign power.

According to a report in

newspaper, Henri M fell for a woman who worked as an interprete­r for the French ambassador in Beijing after he was posted there in 1997 as station chief for France’s DGSE foreign intelligen­ce service. Security sources confirmed the report.

The interprete­r, who has not been named, was reportedly suspected of being an informant.

Pierre Morel, the ambassador, became concerned about the relationsh­ip and asked for Henri M to be recalled to France in 1998.

Henri M left the intelligen­ce service and started a business importing Chinese furniture. He returned to Beijing in 2003, where he married the former interprete­r the following year. The couple moved to Hainan Island, which serves as China’s nuclear submarine base, and Henri M opened a restaurant.

Many questions remain about why he and Pierre-Marie H were only arrested two decades after Henri M first came under suspicion. Franck Renaud, author of a 2010 book that alluded to the scandal, said: “Did the DGSE want to avoid a crisis and, at the same time, let Chinese intelligen­ce believe that Henri M might be a double agent feeding them false informatio­n?”

Florence Parly, the French Defence Minister, confirmed the charges but declined to specify whether the foreign power involved was China.

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