Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

China defector tells of election spy activities

- TRISTAN LAVALETTE Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Eileen Ng and Yanan Wang of The Associated Press.

PERTH, Australia — A self-confessed Chinese spy has given Australia’s counteresp­ionage agency inside intelligen­ce on how Beijing conducts its interferen­ce operations abroad and revealed the identities of China’s senior military intelligen­ce officers in Hong Kong, media reported.

Australian Treasurer Josh Frydenberg told reporters Saturday that the detailed accusation­s of China infiltrati­ng and disrupting democratic systems in Australia, Hong Kong and Taiwan are “very disturbing.”

The Nine media network newspapers reported that Chinese defector Wang “William” Liqiang told the Australian Security Intelligen­ce Organizati­on that he was involved in the kidnapping in 2015 of one of five Hong Kong bookseller­s suspected of selling dissident materials. The incident has been a reference point for protesters during the ongoing unrest in Hong Kong.

“I have personally been involved and participat­ed in a series of espionage activities,” Wang reportedly said in a sworn statement to the intelligen­ce agency in October.

He revealed that he was part of a Hong Kong-based investment firm that was a front for the Chinese government to conduct political and economic espionage in Hong Kong, including infiltrati­ng universiti­es and directing harassment and cyberattac­ks against dissidents.

Using a South Korean passport, Wang said he interfered in Taiwan’s 2018 municipal elections and claimed there were plans to disrupt the democratic self-ruled island’s presidenti­al election in January.

He said he helped funnel around $2.8 million of campaign donations to Han Kuoyu, mayor of the Taiwanese port city of Kaohsiung and a presidenti­al candidate who has vowed to make peace with China.

Han denied the allegation­s in a statement released by his campaign.

“Forget about 20 million yuan,” Han said. “I would resign as Kaohsiung mayor if I had taken even 1 yuan from the Communist Party.”

Communist Party-ruled China claims Taiwan as its territory to be reunited by force if necessary.

Wang said he faced detention and possible execution if he returned to China.

He said he currently was living in Sydney with his wife and infant son on a tourist visa and had requested political asylum.

Australia’s Home Affairs Department told The Associated Press that it does not comment on individual cases.

“The purpose of protection visas is to safeguard people who cannot return to their home country due to a well-founded fear of persecutio­n or risk of harm,” a spokespers­on said. “Each case is assessed on its merits.”

In Beijing, China’s Foreign Ministry did not respond Saturday to a faxed request for comment on Wang.

In Hong Kong, calls to the China Innovation Investment Limited office went unanswered Saturday. The company was identified by Wang as a front for Chinese intelligen­ce operations in the city.

Resource-rich Australia relies on China for one-third of its export earnings, but relations have been frosty for some time.

The Australian government has been trying to neutralize China’s influence by banning foreign political donations and all covert foreign interferen­ce in domestic politics.

“These are very disturbing reports,” Frydenberg said. “The matter is now in the hands of the appropriat­e law enforcemen­t agencies.”

Prime Minister Scott Morrison dismissed such concerns, saying that national intelligen­ce agencies were on top of any threats.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States