July 1, 2023 4:14 AM GMT+7
WASHINGTON, June 30
(Reuters) - The U.S. on Friday warned about a new Chinese counterespionage law,
saying American and other foreign companies in the country could face penalties
from Chinese authorities for regular business activities.
Chinese lawmakers this
year passed a wide-ranging update to Beijing's anti-espionage legislation that goes into effect on July 1, banning
the transfer of any information related to national security and broadening the
definition of spying.
China this year has
also cracked down on U.S. consultancy and due diligence firms, a move business
lobbies have said unnerved foreign investors in the world's second-largest
economy.
The U.S. National
Counterintelligence and Security Center (NCSC) said in a bulletin that China
viewed outbound flow of data as a national security risk, and that the new and
existing laws could compel companies' locally employed Chinese nationals to
assist in Chinese intelligence efforts.
"These laws
provide the PRC (People's Republic of China) government with expanded legal
grounds for accessing and controlling data held by U.S. firms in China,"
the NCSC said.
"U.S. companies
and individuals in China could also face penalties for traditional business
activities that Beijing deems acts of espionage or for actions that Beijing
believes assist foreign sanctions against China," it said.
It said the
ambiguities of the law meant that "any documents, data, materials or
items" could be deemed relevant to Chinese national security, also putting
journalists, academics and researchers at risk.
China's embassy in
Washington said Beijing had a right to safeguard national security through
domestic legislation.
"China will
continue to promote high-level opening-up and provide a more law-based and
international business environment for companies from all countries, including
the United States," embassy spokesman Liu Pengyu said.
Chinese leader Xi
Jinping has emphasized national security since taking office in 2012. Suspicion
in China of the U.S. and its allies has grown as the U.S.-China rivalry has
intensified, yet Beijing has insisted it is opening up to overseas investment.
U.S. officials have
told Reuters that since the enactment of the Chinese law in April they have
received a flood of questions from businesses and other groups about the risks
of traveling to China.
The U.S. State
Department also updated its travel advisory for China on Friday, upgrading the
"risk of wrongful detentions" among its warnings for Americans to
reconsider travel to the country.
U.S. Ambassador to
China Nicholas Burns has said Beijing's targeting of U.S. firms was politically motivated and that Washington would push back.
Reporting by Michael
Martina in Washington Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Matthew Lewis
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters
Trust Principles.
https://www.reuters.com/business/us-warns-new-chinese-counterespionage-law-puts-companies-risk-2023-06-30/
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