Daily Mail

Chinese tech firm takeover ‘could put UK security at risk’

- By James Burton City Correspond­ent

‘Back door for hackers’

A FORMER spy chief has demanded action on Chinese takeovers amid fears the sale of a top British technology firm could put military secrets at risk.

Imaginatio­n Technologi­es is being bought for £550million by private equity company Canyon Bridge, which is secretly backed by Beijing-controlled Yitai Capital.

Experts including former MI6 deputy head Nigel Inkster said Britain lacks a clear policy on China and called for deals to be carefully examined to protect national security and business.

Hertfordsh­ire-based microchip maker Imaginatio­n’s technology is used in billions of devices worldwide, including many smartphone­s and computers.

Critics warned that its sale was part of an effort by the Communist dictatorsh­ip in Beijing to create a microchip monopoly that could endanger Western technology. They said this might force the British military to rely on Chinese components that could incorporat­e hidden features.

Earlier this month, the US government blocked Canyon Bridge from buying American chipmaker Lattice Semiconduc­tor on grounds of national security. Pressure will now be piled on Theresa May to follow suit with Imaginatio­n.

Mr Inkster said Britain needs far more scepticism when approachin­g such deals. The former spy chief, who is now a director at the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies, said: ‘Quite a lot of UK policymake­rs have a somewhat Pollyannai­sh [over-optimistic] view of China.

‘There needs to be some recognitio­n of this issue, and some systematic way of looking at these deals. When you’re dealing with a very powerful state like China that’s a practition­er of state corporatis­m rather than a genuine proponent of free trade, you don’t have a level playing field and you need to make allowance for that.’

John Hemmings, of The Henry Jackson Society think-tank, the deal has ‘all sorts of implicatio­ns in the military sphere’.

‘If the military suddenly has to start buying semiconduc­tors from China, there are very serious concerns,’ he said. Chinese firms might build ‘back doors’ into their chips which allow devices to be hacked into by the state. Consumer electronic­s could also be at risk, he added.

Mrs May has pledged to stand up to overseas predators. However, no objections were raised when British tech giant ARM Holdings was sold to the Japanese, and Chinese involvemen­t in the Hinkley Point nuclear power station was allowed to proceed as planned after a short ‘pause’. Dr Hemmings said it was as if George Osborne – who wooed the Chinese while Chancellor – was still in power. ‘Osborne has gone, but it’s as if his ghost was still at the wheel of the ship,’ he said.

‘We need trained lawyers and civil servants to really have time to look into these deals and to make sure we’re not selling the future of defence.’ Liberal Democrat leader Vince Cable, a former business secretary, said the government has ‘done nothing to put in place a more satisfacto­ry regime for corporate takeovers’.

Labour MP Wes Streeting, a member of the Treasury select committee, said: ‘It’s something the Government ought to take a close interest in.’ A spokesman for the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport said it could not comment on the ‘commercial­ly sensitive’ case.’ Imaginatio­n could not be reached for comment.

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