China's Ministry of State Security is once again
circulating claims it has discovered foreign espionage devices in its domestic
waters.
In a note on its Wechat channel, the state security ministry said foreign
intelligence agencies have been “using different methods to strengthen their
monitoring of China's maritime areas, carrying out a series of intelligence
gathering and technical espionage activities.” It has paid Chinese fishermen handsome
rewards for their discovery of what they claimed were
multiple spying devices caught in fishing nets inside of China’s exclusive
economic zone.
China’s claims of
finding smaller, automated underwater devices, equipped with the ability to
self-destruct, date back to at least 2020. Earlier this year, Chinese state
media said the country’s government had uncovered evidence foreign spies had installed monitoring devices in aquaculture data-monitoring equipment. China Central Television’s Legal Channel 9
reported a sea cucumber farmer in Eastern China contacted police after he grew
suspicious about hardware installed by a foreign equipment supplier in 2019.
The equipment is
designed to collect geographical, meteorological, biological, and other
sensitive data for foreign governments, according to the Ministry of State
Security message. The ministry’s WeChat account also recently warned nationals
working overseas for Chinese firms to be wary of foreign intelligence
operatives seeking to steal secrets.
Over the past two years, the Chinese government has
put a renewed emphasis on national security by updating a national security law
and launching publicity campaigns about the alleged threat of foreign spies and
collaborators in China, including foreign academics and NGOs working on
projects in China. A revision of the country’s espionage laws in the summer of 2023
widened the scope of what qualifies as a state secret and, thus, what
information can be shared with overseas entities.
Meanwhile, China’s own espionage efforts abroad have become publicized
topics of interest in the U.S., U.K., and Australia. The U.S. government said a spy balloon was able to transmit data back to China before it was shot down in U.S. territory in
February 2023. More recently, the Australian TV program Four Corners broadcast an interview with a Chinese man who fled to Australia in
2023 and claimed to have worked as an informant for China’s Ministry of Public
Security to track targets overseas, including in Australia, Canada, and
Thailand. In early May 2024, U.K. police
announced charges against three men they allege were caught working for Chinese
intelligence services to surveil Hong Kong activists in the U.K. In
April of this year, three people were arrested in Germany and accused of spying for China.