Bangkok Post

Ex-British pilot faces training PLA accusation­s

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SYDNEY: Police are investigat­ing a former British military pilot suspected of involvemen­t in the training of Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) pilots at a flying school in South Africa, a Sydney court was told yesterday.

Federal police searched the Australian home of Keith Hartley, chief operating officer of the Test Flying Academy of South Africa (TFASA), in November, the Federal Court heard.

Britain and Australia have announced crackdowns on former military pilots working to train Chinese fliers, and Britain vowed to change its national security law to stop them working for intermedia­ries such as the South African flying school.

Mr Hartley has not been charged and is taking court action seeking the return of materials seized from his home by Australian police and challengin­g the validity of the search warrant.

The police warrant said Mr Hartley’s home was searched because he was suspected of the offence of providing military-style training of Chinese military pilots. The training was delivered by TFASA, and Mr Hartley is alleged to have organised and facilitate­d the training, the court heard.

Mr Hartley’s lawyer Dennis Miralis previously said in a statement that Mr Hartley and TFASA firmly deny any criminal wrongdoing.

Mr Hartley’s barrister, Craig Lenehan SC, told the Federal Court the warrant was not clear enough, did not specify how Mr Hartley was involved in the training and questioned whether the term “military hardware platform” was a plane or a flight simulator or software.

Acting for the Commission­er of Police, barrister Perry Herzfeld SC, argued the complaint should be rejected, because it would be clear to Mr Hartley, given his long aviation experience, including as a test pilot.

“The meaning must have been immediatel­y apparent to him when he read the warrant,” he said. “The training is said to be provided to pilots of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army.”

The search warrant was not required to explain how the Chinese military had funded the training of its pilots at this stage of the investigat­ion, he said.

Another ex-military pilot who previously worked for the flying school was arrested in Australia in October and is fighting extraditio­n to the US where he faces charges of training Chinese military pilots to land on aircraft carriers.

Britain’s air force chief said this month intelligen­ce agencies in Australia and Britain had shared informatio­n to warn pilots against working for Beijing.

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