The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Chinese hackers ‘may target Tory vote’

- By Glen Owen and Amy-Jo Crowley

CHINA could attempt to interfere in the Tory leadership election in a similar manner to alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 Brexit referendum, British security sources fear.

For the first time, Conservati­ve Party members will have the opportunit­y to change their postal vote online – once only – if they have a rethink and want to back a different candidate in the contest.

But the security sources have raised the prospect that the reform could leave the process vulnerable to foreign cyber-hacking.

A 2020 report by the Intelligen­ce and Security Committee found ‘substantia­l evidence’ that Russian interferen­ce was commonplac­e, including in the 2016 referendum on withdrawin­g from the EU.

While Foreign Secretary Liz Truss has adopted a hard line on Russia and China, Rishi Sunak has taken a more emollient approach, on the grounds that it is in the interests of internatio­nal trade.

After the former chancellor launched his leadership bid, China’s largest state tabloid praised him for his record on strengthen­ing ties with the country.

The Global Times, a sister publicatio­n of the Chinese Communist

Party mouthpiece the People’s Daily, said that while ‘most of the candidates hold a tough stance on China’, he was the only one with ‘a clear and pragmatic view on developing UK-China ties’.

In her interview with today’s Mail on Sunday, Ms Truss trumpets her record on both countries, saying: ‘We made a huge mistake as the free world in being too close to Russia, allowing Russia into the G8, Europe becoming dependent on Russian oil and gas, and allowing Russian business culture to influence places like London.

‘Now we have fixed that with the toughest sanctions regime that any country in the world has on Russia and I urge Europe to get off

Russian gas as soon as possible because that is funding Vladimir Putin’s war machine, and I think we need to be very clear that Russia is working with China.

‘We shouldn’t be strategica­lly dependent on China – we should be very careful in areas such as technology that we’re not enabling the threat against us.’

Ms Truss added: ‘We need to be working more with like-minded nations to build our resilience and whether that’s in energy, whether it’s in food, what we cannot be is dependent on those authoritar­ian regimes.’

Mr Sunak’s wife, Akshata Murty, holds a financial interest in two Chinese technology services businesses. She is linked to the companies through Infosys, the IT consultanc­y group set up by her father the billionair­e Indian businessma­n N.R. Narayana Murthy. The group owns Infosys Technologi­es (China) Co Limited and Infosys Technologi­es (Shanghai) Co Limited.

Several other family members, including Murty’s father, have a stake in Infosys, which is worth around £67 billion.

The Chinese subsidiari­es of the group generated 12.9billion rupees (£134 million) in total turnover last year and are believed to employ around 3,300 workers at offices in Shanghai, Beijing, Dalian, Hangzhou and Jiaxing.

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