Advocates raise issue
of officials spying for China
THE ENEMY WITHIN: One group said that it
expected China to try and spy on Taiwan, but found it truly ¡¥shocking¡¦ that
Taiwanese officials might help them
By Loa Iok-sin / Staff Reporter
Human rights advocates yesterday expressed concern about the possibility of
government employees spying on pro-democracy and human rights groups for Beijing
and called on the government to implement measures to stop such behavior.
The groups raised their concerns following the arrest late last month of Central
Police University associate professor Wu Chang-yu (§d¹ü¸Î), who was suspected of
gathering information on the activities of Falun Gong, Tibetan support groups
and exiled Chinese democracy activists in Taiwan, with the assistance of two
police officers, and then delivering that information to the People¡¦s Republic
of China government.
Wu is not the first government employee arrested for spying for China. Since
2002, a total of 13 people ¡X including senior military officers, a Presidential
Office official, as well as serving and retired intelligence officers ¡X have
been arrested for espionage.
The most notable case came in January when former Major General Lo Hsien-che
(ù½åõ) of the Army Command Headquarters was found to have handed over classified
military information to Beijing.
¡§We know there are Chinese journalists and academics trying to gather
information on Taiwan for their government, but it is shocking to contemplate
that people who work for our government could also be spying for China,¡¨ Taiwan
Friends of Tibet president Chow Mei-li (©P¬ü¨½) told a press conference at the
legislature.
¡§Enhanced cross-strait exchanges mean that we now face even more of a threat
from Chinese espionage. I urge the government to establish a special commission
to investigate these issues,¡¨ Chow said.
Chinese Human Rights Concern Alliance Taiwan president Yang Hsien-hung (·¨¾Ë§»)
said the number of double agents who had yet to be uncovered was also a matter
of concern.
¡§A lot of people have been arrested for spying for China, but what is of even
more concern is how many more spies are out there,¡¨ Yang said. ¡§When you spot a
cockroach in your house and kill it, do you think that¡¦s the end of the story
and that the house is free of vermin? Of course not, if you see one, then there
are bound to be a lot more out there.¡¨
The government appears to believe the cases are isolated and it has so far
failed to take coordinated action to uncover spies working in public
institutions, Yang said.
Kong Shiren (¤ÕÃѤ¯), deputy -secretary-general of the Democratic Party of China, a
party organized by exiled Chinese pro-democracy activists, shared those
concerns.
Taiwanese and the government may be ¡§too relaxed¡¨ about the ¡§threat from across
the [Taiwan] Strait,¡¨ Kong said.
¡§I understand that, as a democracy, Taiwan¡¦s national security cannot be as
strong as that of an authoritarian government, but it should not be too relaxed
about such matters either,¡¨ Kong said.
¡§Taiwan must remember that it is not without an enemy ¡X there is a threatening
power directly across the Strait and it has its eyes on Taiwan,¡¨ Kong said.
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