Daily Mail

MI5 planning to vet academics in bid to root out foreign spies

- By Kumail Jaffer Political Correspond­ent

SPY chiefs could vet academics to prevent hostile states infiltrati­ng UK campuses and stealing sensitive research.

Ministers are reviewing options to root out spies after discoverin­g higher education institutio­ns are being targeted.

These include MI5 checking security clearances for ‘ key personnel’ at universiti­es. Deputy PM Oliver Dowden met the vice- chancellor­s of 24 leading universiti­es including Cambridge and Oxford yesterday to brief them on the espionage threat.

The director general of MI5 and head of the National Cyber Security Centre also emphasised the dangers from foreign powers at the meeting.

Mr Dowden said: ‘ For a millennium, our universiti­es have thrived on being open. Open to ideas, open to innovation, open to being independen­t of government.

‘This is not about erecting fences, this is about balancing evolving threats and protecting the integrity and security of our great institutio­ns.’

The deputy PM will now launch a consultati­on exercise to protect technology being developed in sensitive sectors and to reduce the dependency of institutio­ns on foreign investment.

The measures will be focused on a small proportion of academic work, with a particular focus on research with potential dual uses in civilian and military life. More funding could be given to the Research Collaborat­ion Advice Team, a government unit that provides advice to universiti­es on the national security risks linked to internatio­nal research.

Ministers have been under pressure to take stronger action to prevent Chinese influence in particular amid warnings Beijing is gaining undue influence over the academic sector.

Officials are even looking into whether hostile states could use

Chinese-made electric cars to gather intelligen­ce. Campaigner­s reacted with cautious optimism to the announceme­nt.

Luke de Pulford, of the InterParli­amentary Alliance on China, said: ‘The elephant in the room is our dependence on fees from Chinese students. Until our universiti­es have a more resilient funding model, we will remain exposed to Beijing’s influence.

‘Moreover, there’s no plan to

‘Gaining undue influence’

shut down nefarious [Beijingcon­nected] Confucius Institutes, which Rishi Sunak pledged to close on day one of his premiershi­p – and then didn’t. The Deputy PM’s plans are a step in the right direction, but are totally inadequate to address the severity of the problem.’

Vivienne Stern, head of Universiti­es UK, said: ‘This consultati­on is an important next step, and we will gather views from all 142 universiti­es in our membership to help government develop the right approach.’

 ?? ?? Fears: Universiti­es such as Cambridge could be targeted
Fears: Universiti­es such as Cambridge could be targeted

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