South China Morning Post

U.K. WARNED OF FIRM RESPONSE BY BEIJING OVER SPYING ROW

Hong Kong leader John Lee also says interferen­ce with city’s overseas economic offices will backfire

- Kahon Chan kahon.chan@scmp.com

The Chinese embassy in London has warned of a “firm response” if Britain further jeopardise­s ties after its top diplomat was summoned by Britain’s foreign office over the prosecutio­n of three men accused of spying on behalf of Hong Kong.

The Foreign, Commonweal­th and Developmen­t Office (FCDO) yesterday said ambassador Zheng Zeguang had been summoned on the instructio­ns of Foreign Minister David Cameron.

Hours earlier, Hong Kong Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu warned that any attempts by countries to interfere in the work of its overseas economic offices would harm their own interests given the city’s trade surpluses with those nations.

“The FCDO was unequivoca­l in setting out that the recent pattern of behaviour directed by China against the UK, including cyberattac­ks, reports of espionage links and the issuing of bounties is not acceptable,” a spokesman for the office said.

On Monday, China’s embassy in London said Beijing had lodged serious representa­tions with Britain over the case, urging it to immediatel­y stop all “anti-China political manipulati­on” and ensure the legitimate rights and interests of the Chinese citizens in the country.

The embassy issued a statement later yesterday, saying Zheng made “further, serious representa­tions” to the UK side on its “wrongful behaviour and unwarrante­d accusation” against the Hong Kong government.

It said the British side had also wantonly harassed, arrested and detained Chinese citizens in the UK under the pretext of judicial and national security, and this constitute­d a grave provocatio­n against China and severely contravene­d basic norms governing internatio­nal relations.

“We want to make it clear to the UK side: any move to interfere in China’s internal affairs and undermine our interests will be met with a firm response,” the statement said. “The UK side must not go further down the dangerous path of jeopardisi­ng China-UK relations.”

British police earlier arrested Bill Yuen Chung-biu, an office manager at the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in London, 38-year-old Peter Wai Chi-leung and 37-year-old Matthew Trickett on suspicion of assisting a foreign intelligen­ce service and foreign interferen­ce between December 2023 and May of this year. They were granted bail after being charged and will next appear in court on May 24.

It is alleged they carried out surveillan­ce of Hong Kong activists now living in the United Kingdom.

The FCDO statement said the three were charged under the National Security Act as part of an investigat­ion led by officers from the Metropolit­an Police’s counterter­rorism command, and that the foreign intelligen­ce service said to be involved related to Hong Kong.

The foreign affairs ministry in Beijing yesterday added it had “serious concerns” about the prosecutio­n and appealed to the British government to safeguard the legitimate interests of Chinese citizens in the UK.

Chief Executive Lee, meanwhile, said he had no memory of meeting Yuen, after a picture of the pair taken at a 2002 policing course graduation event went viral online. Yuen and Lee were among eight police officers photograph­ed at the ceremony held in Hong Kong to celebrate finishing a self-learning course run by Australia’s Charles Sturt University.

Lee left the force in 2012 to serve as undersecre­tary for security under then-leader Leung Chun-ying’s administra­tion.

“The photo shows a class of graduates. I am one of them, and [Yuen] is reportedly also in this photo. My impression of this person is this photo,” Lee told reporters ahead of the weekly meeting of his key decisionma­king Executive Council.

Lee said the duties of Hong Kong economic and trade offices were to liaise closely with local officials, businesses and think tanks to enrich ties in trade, investment, arts and culture, as well as to enhance stakeholde­rs’ knowledge of the city’s strengths.

He cautioned countries against attempts to interfere in the work of the outposts, noting economies such as the UK and the United States had trade surpluses with the city.

“Any attempt to interfere with the work of the [offices] in different places will be against free trade and free economy, and will be harming the economy of the countries that try to do bad things to the operation of the [offices],” he added.

“We will, of course, do our best to protect the rightful interest and the rights that [offices] enjoy as a result of legitimate officials working for the Hong Kong government, and we’ll urge all government­s to respect the rightful duty of our [offices] in their economies.”

Lee reiterated city authoritie­s had asked the British consul general in Hong Kong to provide further details about the arrests, while “seriously demanding” the UK protect the legitimate rights and interests of the office manager.

“Any attempt to make unwarrante­d allegation­s against the [Hong Kong] government is unacceptab­le,” he said.

It is understood that Wai is a City of London Police special constable and the director of D5 Security Limited, which provides services for high-net-worth individual­s, families and businesses.

The Post has learned that Trickett was an immigratio­n enforcemen­t officer and also a director of MTR Consultanc­y, a firm primarily focused on security.

 ?? Photo: Jack Tsang ?? Bill Yuen, office manager at the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in London, outside Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court.
Photo: Jack Tsang Bill Yuen, office manager at the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in London, outside Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court.
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