China tops spy list: CSIS
Mon Apr 30 2007
OTTAWA – Almost half the effort the country's spy-watchers put into monitoring suspicious foreign activity in Canada is devoted to Chinese operatives, the head of CSIS said today.
OTTAWA – Almost half the effort the country's
spy-watchers put into monitoring suspicious foreign activity in Canada
is devoted to Chinese operatives, the head of CSIS said today.
Jim Judd, director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, said
there are a lot of foreign agents operating in Canada, many adopting the
guise of innocent visitors.
"It's surprising, sometimes, the number of hyperactive tourists we get here and where they come from."
Judd told the Senate committee on defence and national security that 15
countries account for most of the concern when it comes to foreign
intelligence-gathering or interference in Canadian affairs.
He wouldn't identify all those countries, but did tell senators that China tops the list.
He said CSIS tries to keep close tabs on foreign operatives and hopes "that we have all the bases covered."
Judd said his agency is charged with monitoring foreign efforts to
collect information, both public and private; to meddle in Canadian
affairs; or to foment trouble within ethnic communities
China has been accused of all three activities in the past and has steadfastly denied it has spies in Canada.
Earlier this month, a Chinese-language TV station demanded the
expulsion of a Chinese diplomat for allegedly trying to block its
licence approval.
New Tang Dynasty TV said
diplomat Huang Huikang tried to orchestrate a campaign to keep it from
getting a broadcast licence from the CRTC.
The station said the Chinese embassy has also tried to sabotage the
station by urging Chinese-Canadians to boycott various activities.
Two years ago a pair of Chinese officials who defected and sought
asylum in Australia said China was running hundreds of spies and
informants in Canada, mainly in Vancouver and Toronto.
One of the defectors said some of those agents were charged with intimidating members of the Falun Gong sect in Canada.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper, when he was still Opposition leader, claimed there were up to 1,000 Chinese agents in Canada.
He quoted a CSIS official as saying that Chinese spies stole $1 billion worth of technological secrets every month.
Last year, Foreign Affairs Minister Peter MacKay said he wanted a
crackdown on Chinese espionage. MacKay is currently on a China visit.
In a 2004 report, CSIS said Chinese economic espionage targeted
information including contract details, supplier lists, planning
documents, research and development data, technical drawings and
computer databases.
Foreign students and
scientists, business delegations and immigrants were among those
recruited as informants, the spy agency said.
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