Gulf Today

Executed ‘spy’ sold secrets to US, says China

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BEIJING: China indicated for the first time on Monday that a man executed for spying in 2016 had sold secrets to the United States.

In a video posted on Monday in a campaign to promote China’s success in combating foreign espionage, state broadcaste­r CCTV confirmed that Huang Yu had been executed in May 2016, a month ater his conviction and death sentence were announced.

At the time, China had given no details of the country Huang was accused of assisting.

In Monday’s video an announcer also made no explicit mention of the country, but images were shown of an American flag and the US Capitol building.

The United States Embassy did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

CCTV said the Sichuan man had handed over secrets, including details on China’s military communicat­ions, to a foreign government.

Previously, China has said he had been paid $700,000 by his foreign handlers, before being arrested in 2011.

Monday’s video was part of a campaign in China’s state media to heighten awareness of what Beijing sees as the threat from foreign spies and to celebrate China’s counter-espionage successes.

A coordinate­d run of stories and videos was released ahead of a day dedicated to promote national security awareness and citizen vigilance establishe­d under president xij in ping nine years ago.

In a separate statement on Monday, China’s State Security Ministry said it would work to “create sharp weapons” under the law to crack down on spying.

Last year, lawmakers passed a wide-ranging update to China’s anti-espionage legislatio­n, banning the transfer of any informatio­n deemed to relate to national security, a move that unnerved some foreign businesses and investors.

The security ministry also released a threeminut­e video of an apparent reenactmen­t of a Chinese spy infiltrati­ng meetings, offices and labs to collect informatio­n, and then being caught.

The video did not make clear whether it referred to a specific case.

Separately, the top US diplomat for East Asia discussed Middle East developmen­ts, the South China Sea and Taiwan issues with Chinese counterpar­ts in Beijing, the State Department said on Monday, the latest effort by the two countries to stabilize rocky ties.

Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Daniel Kritenbrin­k met with Executive Vice Foreign Minister Ma Zhaoxu, as well as with Beijing’s Taiwan Affairs Office Deputy Director Qiu Kaiming, the State Department said in a statement on the April 14-16 visit.

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