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China accuses MI6 of recruiting Chinese state workers

Beijing and several Western countries have increasingly been trading accusations of espionage.

China has accused UK’s Secret Intelligence Service MI6 of recruiting Chinese state employees as spies.

In a post on its official WeChat channel, China’s Ministry of State Security said MI6 operatives turned a Chinese man identified only by his surname Wang and his wife surnamed Zhou against Beijing.

Both worked in “core confidential” departments in a Chinese state agency.

The ministry alleged that MI6 started cultivating Mr Wang when he went to the UK for his studies in 2015, under a Sino-British exchange programme.

The operatives took “special care” of him in the UK, such as by inviting him to dinners and tours to better “understand his interests and weaknesses” the ministry alleged.

The BBC has reached out to the UK authorities for a response.

This comes just over a month after the UK charged two men with spying for China. UK police have accused them of giving “articles, notes, documents or information” to a foreign state, while China has called the allegations “malicious slander”.

Earlier this month, a former Royal Marine charged with assisting the Hong Kong intelligence service was found dead, said police.

Beijing and several Western countries have increasingly been trading accusations of espionage.

In the case of Mr Wang, Chinese authorities said the MI6 operatives took advantage of Mr Wang’s “strong desire for money”, befriended him on campus under the guise that they were alumnus, and got him to provide “paid consulting services”.

After a period of time, and under their assessment that “the conditions were ripe”, the operatives then asked him to serve the British government in exchange for better remuneration and offers of security, China’s Ministry of State Security claimed.

Through Mr Wang the MI6 operatives also recruited Ms Zhou to spy for China, it added.

“Wang was initially hesitant but could not resist [the operatives’] repeated persuasion, enticement and even coercion, and eventually agreed,” the ministry said in a statement on WeChat.

“Under Wang’s strong instigation, Zhou agreed to collect intelligence… and he and his wife became British spies.”

It added that the case is still under investigation.

China’s Ministry of State Security has been posting frequent updates on its official channel since it was launched in August.

In January, it warned its citizens against “exotic beauties” seeking to lure them into the hands of foreign spy agencies.

Among other things, it has also cautioned citizens against photographing military equipment and warned against organisations “recruiting aviation enthusiasts as volunteers” to transmit China’s flight data to other countries.

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