The Bradenton Herald

UK police charge 3 men with aiding Hong Kong intel service

- BY STEPHEN CASTLE

Three men have been charged with assisting the Hong Kong intelligen­ce service, the London Metropolit­an Police said Monday, following an investigat­ion in which arrests and searches were carried out across England.

The three people charged under Britain’s National Security Act were identified as Chi Leung (Peter) Wai, 38, of Stainesupo­n-Thames, Matthew Trickett, 37, of Maidenhead, and Chung Biu Yuen, 63, of Hackney,

East London.

“The foreign intelligen­ce service to which the above charges relate is that of Hong Kong,” police said in a statement.

All three men appeared at Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court on Monday. As court proceeding­s are now active, Britain’s reporting restrictio­ns apply, preventing speculatio­n about the case.

Dominic Murphy, head of the Metropolit­an Police’s counterter­rorism command, said the investigat­ion was continuing. “While these offenses are concerning, I want to reassure the public that we do not believe there to be any wider threat to them,” he said.

Eleven people in total were detained during the investigat­ion. Eight men and a woman were arrested May 1 in Yorkshire, in northern England, by counterter­rorism police officers. The following day, a man was arrested in London and another in Yorkshire.

The eight people who were not charged have been released from custody.

The announceme­nt coincided with a warning from Prime Minister Rishi Sunak that the country was facing some of the most dangerous years it has ever known.

In a speech in London on Monday morning, Sunak described China, Russia, North Korea and Iran as a newly assertive “axis of authoritar­ian states.”

“More will change in the next five years than in the last 30. I’m convinced that the next few years will be some of the most dangerous yet most transforma­tional our country has ever known,” Sunak said, adding: “Our country stands at a crossroads.”

With a general election expected in the second half of the year, Sunak’s speech was highly political in tone, seeking to draw dividing lines between his Conservati­ve Party and the opposition Labour Party, which is well ahead in opinion polls. Britain, Sunak said, would be less safe if Labour’s leader, Keir Starmer, became prime minister.

“Over the next few years, from our democracy to our economy to our society – to the hardest questions of war and peace – almost every aspect of our lives is going to change,” he said.

In a statement, Pat McFadden, Labour’s campaign coordinato­r, responded that “the only way to stop the chaos, turn the page and start to renew is with a change of government.”

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