South China Morning Post

Spy agency warns of ‘consulting’ risks

Foreign firms have tried to steal state and commercial secrets, Beijing says

- Vanessa Cai vanessa.cai@scmp.com

China’s top counter-espionage agency has warned that overseas entities have obtained commercial and state secrets under the guise of consulting as Beijing pushes to alert profession­als to risks amid a sweeping national security drive.

In a post on its official WeChat account yesterday, the Ministry of State Security said overseas spy agencies had used consulting activities “as a cover” for their attempts to steal classified informatio­n, posing “major risks to national security”.

The article was accompanie­d by a video, which the ministry said was based on a real case where overseas agencies instructed a consulting company to steal classified informatio­n from a Chinese company that wanted to invest abroad. In the video, a man travels in time to remind his past self to stay alert and avoid leaking informatio­n related to the economy, technology and military to the consultanc­y.

Over the past year, the state security ministry has become more active on social media to warn about the threat from foreign spies and to call on the public to share informatio­n about suspicious activity.

The country’s revised counter-espionage law, which came into effect in July 2023, expands both the definition of spying and the investigat­ive powers of national security agencies. The newly amended state secrets law, effective from May, adds a dozen new clauses that expand the depth and reach of its coverage.

The ministry said the overseas consultanc­y conducted a comprehens­ive review of the Chinese company with the stated purpose of assisting its overseas listing, but used the process to gain access to core data and state secrets.

It said the consultanc­y persuaded staff at the company to answer questions about classified informatio­n, inquired about unauthoris­ed classified files and recorded classified informatio­n about core products.

“Such informatio­n, if accumulate­d to a certain extent and analysed in a comprehens­ive manner, can reflect important informatio­n about our economic operation, national defence and military, which are important targets coveted by overseas espionage and intelligen­ce agencies, and once leaked, will seriously endanger national security,” the ministry said, adding that such activities amounted to illegally obtaining commercial secrets for “containmen­t and suppressio­n of China’s advantageo­us industries”.

These activities aim to spy on and steal China’s core secrets, acting as “an accomplice” in espionage, infiltrati­on and instigatio­n, the ministry added.

Without naming the overseas consultanc­y that inspired the video, the ministry said its illegal activities were being watched and state security agencies had “acted decisively, blocking the channels of leakage of core data”.

Last year, several foreign consulting companies were targeted in raids. In April, local police questioned staff at US consultanc­y Bain & Company’s Shanghai office. In May, authoritie­s raided internatio­nal consulting firm Capvision.

The ministry emphasised that under the counter-espionage law, the definition of espionage was not limited to working directly with spy agencies and their surrogates but could also include working with other groups to leak state secrets.

Last week, the ministry warned that the networks of “hundreds” of Chinese business and government units had been infiltrate­d by an overseas hacking group, and urged citizens to step up cybersecur­ity.

[This] can reflect important informatio­n about our economic operation, national defence and military MINISTRY OF STATE SECURITY

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