BY TOM O'CONNOR ON 4/20/23 AT 3:14 PM
EDT
France and Germany, which are among dozens of nations reported
to host a network of alleged overseas stations used by Chinese security forces
to monitor and harass dissidents, are probing potential operations on their own
soil in connection with the issue.
Such
sites, as Newsweek reported
in December, appear to exist on both
U.S. territory and in more
than 50 countries around the world. They've drawn increased attention since
the FBI's arrest
of two Chinese nationals accused of operating an "illegal overseas police
station" on behalf of the Chinese Ministry of Public Security in Manhattan
on Monday.
When it
comes to his own country, French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin said in
comments shared with Newsweek, "under
no circumstances will France tolerate attacks on its sovereignty."
"It intends to vigorously combat foreign influences on its
soil and will not allow international rules providing for the admission of
these citizens to undermine our good relations with certain nations," he
added, "whether that be China or any other country."
Darmanin also asserted that France's General
Directorate of Internal Security Forces (DGSI) "is paying close attention
to the revelations" made by the Spain-based NGO Safeguard Defenders, which
has reported on two service centers operated by China's Wenzhou and Qingtian
Public Security Bureaus and two contact points run by the Fuzhou Public
Security Bureau in Paris.
He said the DGSI was actually "working on
this issue prior to the release of these revelations," and that he
"requested that the DGSI step up its intelligence investigation."
"Over four years ago, faced with all of
the countries that have extremely aggressive counter-influence operations in
France, President [Emmanuel] Macron requested that the DGSI receive additional
support," Darmanin said.
"Let me reassure you—France will never
tolerate this kind of behavior," he added. "As for the four police
stations in France mentioned by the NGO, they have yet to be confirmed."
Germany has also been
investigating potential sites linked to Chinese overseas surveillance and
policing since at least October of last year. Reporting by Safeguard Defenders
and Newsweek identified one potential service center
operated by the Qingtian Public Security Bureau in Frankfurt.
A
spokesperson for the German Federal Ministry of the Interior and Community
(BMI) told Newsweek that
the agency "assumes on the basis of previous findings that so-called
'Chinese overseas police stations' in Germany tend to be organized on a
personal and mobile basis and that no permanent offices have been established.
"The Chinese Embassy was requested to immediately terminate
activities outside the Vienna Conventions on Diplomatic and Consular Relations
and to close down existing 'Chinese overseas police stations' in Germany,"
the spokesperson said. "There is an exchange with the Chinese Embassy on
this matter.
"The federal security authorities continue to follow up on
the issue and thus on any indication of these so-called "Chinese overseas
police stations," the spokesperson added. "To this end, there is a
continuing close exchange of information with the relevant state
authorities."
In response to Newsweek questions on Tuesday, Chinese Embassy to the United States
spokesperson Liu Pengyu denied the existence of any government-led operation to
pursue dissidents on foreign territory. "The relevant sites are formed by
overseas Chinese, drawing upon the resources of local communities and providing
a place for overseas Chinese in need to access consultation and
assistance," he said. "The service personnel are warm-hearted local
people serving as volunteers."
"There is no employment or affiliation with any Chinese
government agency (including sub-national governments and public security
agencies)," Liu said, "nor are these sites authorized or delegated to
provide the service."
Such service, he said, "is a common practice recognized and
adopted by countries worldwide."
"During the COVID pandemic, overseas Chinese submitted
online applications for purposes such as driver's license renewal to relevant
public security agencies in China," Liu added. "These are essentially
acts of online self-service. There is no breaching of laws or regulations, and
no infringement of the judicial sovereignty of the host country."
France and Germany have maintained complex ties with China as
relations between Beijing and Washington deteriorated sharply in recent years.
The two European nations have expressed wariness of Beijing's rise, as well as
its human rights record. At the same time, they have emphasized the importance
of maintaining robust trade ties with the world's second-largest economy.
Joined by
a European
Union delegation led by European Commission President Ursula von
der Leyen, Macron visited China earlier this month to meet with his Chinese
counterpart Xi
Jinping. After the trip, the French president urged Europe to pursue a
policy of "strategic autonomy" not beholden to either Beijing or
Washington, a call that European Council President Charles Michel later said
was being echoed within the continent.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz also met with Xi during a visit to
Beijing in November, marking the first travel by a Group of Seven (G7) nation
leader to the country in three years. The trip was followed up last week by
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock's meetings with her Chinese
counterparts Foreign Minister Qin Gang and Communist Party Central Foreign
Affairs Commission Director Wang Yi in Beijing.
In addition to France and Germany, other countries pursuing
investigation into the presence of potential illicit Chinese police activity at
home include Canada, Ireland, Japan, the Netherlands and South Korea.
Speaking
to Newsweek a day
after the arrests were made in New York City, a senior official of U.S.
President Joe
Biden's administration said that "the U.S. Government has been
clear that we will use all available tools to protect American citizens and
other U.S. persons from transnational repression and other forms of foreign
malign influence."
"We will not tolerate the PRC Government—or any foreign
government—harassing or threatening U.S. persons," the official said.
https://www.newsweek.com/france-germany-probe-china-police-stations-after-nyc-suspects-arrested-1795642
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