The Borneo Post

Taiwan double agent gets 18-year sentence for spying for China

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A Taiwanese court yesterday sentenced a former intelligen­ce officer to 18 years in prison for spying for China, the latest in a series of espionage scandals in recent years.

Lo Chi-cheng, formally a colonel in the military intelligen­ce bureau, was convicted of selling classified informatio­n to China multiple times between 2007 and 2010 in return for about 250,000, the high court said.

A military tribunal in 2011 had sentenced Lo to life in prison, which he appealed. The high court reduced his sentence on the grounds that he had confessed and shown remorse, a court official said.

He can also appeal Wednesday’s ruling. Defence authoritie­s have said ‘damage control’ measures began after Lo was arrested in late 2010 but have not elaborated.

Media reports say Lo sold lists of spies stationed on the mainland and other secret informatio­n to China, which compromise­d crucial Taiwanese intelligen­ce networks and endangered the lives of agents.

Lo was recruited by a Taiwanese businessma­n, who was sentenced to three years and six months in jail for his role in the case in a separate ruling.

Taiwan has been rocked by a series of espionage scandals in recent years, despite warming ties with China under current Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou.

Taiwanese authoritie­s are currently investigat­ing a former top negotiator on China policy who stepped down last month over suspicions he leaked confidenti­al workrelate­d informatio­n.

A retired vice admiral was jailed for 14 months last year for collecting confidenti­al military informatio­n for China, while an army general who headed an intelligen­ce unit was sentenced in 2011 to life for spying for China. — AFP

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