What is being done to purge SG of PRC spies?

If a chiobu ATB ever tries to seduce me for what I know, I'll tell her everything I know and even some things I don't know. :wink::sneaky::biggrin:
 
Chinese embassy says 'self-proclaimed agent' Wang Liqiang is convicted fraudster
Updated about 9 hours ago
Wang Liqiang looks to the right as he sits mid-speech. He has glasses, wears a checked shirt and dark jacket.
PHOTO Wang Liqiang has alleged the Chinese Communist Party ordered overseas assassinations. SUPPLIED: 60 MINUTES AUSTRALIA
The Chinese embassy in Canberra has hit back at Australian media reports of a man who says he worked as a secret Chinese operative for five years, saying he is a convicted fraudster.
Wang Liqiang told Nine Newspapers he was seeking asylum in Australia, and was willing to detail his operations working as an intelligence agent for the Communist Party.
The embassy said Mr Wang was convicted of fraud and wanted by police after fleeing on a fake passport.
The statement, which referred to Mr Wang as a "self-proclaimed Chinese agent", said he was sentenced to one year and three months in prison for fraud, with a suspended sentence of a year and a half.
It referenced a Shanghai police statement which said they had opened an investigation into Mr Wang in April after he allegedly cheated 4.6 million yuan ($960,000) through a "fake investment project" involving car imports in February.
The embassy said Mr Wang left for Hong Kong the same month the investigation was opened, with a "fake" Chinese passport and "fake" permanent Hong Kong resident ID.
It is understood Mr Wang is speaking with Australia's domestic spy agency, ASIO, and has alleged the Communist Party ordered overseas assassinations — including in Australia.
In the statement Mr Wang provided ASIO last month, he reportedly stated: "I have been personally involved and participated in a series of espionage activities."
The Chinese embassy's comments come a day after Nine Newspapers reported Mr Wang was in hiding in Sydney.
On Saturday, a senior official speaking on the condition of anonymity told the ABC Australian security agencies were working to "separate fact from fiction" while assessing Mr Wang's reports.
He also reportedly told the group that Beijing spies were infiltrating Hong Kong's pro-democracy movement, "operating with impunity in Australia" and influencing elections in Taiwan.
In a clip from 60 Minutes shared on social media, Mr Wang was translated as having said he decided to seek political asylum in Australia and provide new information about Beijing's alleged espionage activities because he "knows very well that the Chinese Communist Party can never be trusted".
"Once I go back, I will be dead," he added.
'Government makes no apologies for interference laws'
Speaking on Insiders on Sunday morning, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg responded to calls from his colleagues, including MP Andrew Hastie, for Mr Wang to be granted political asylum in Australia.
Mr Frydenberg said Mr Hastie was "entitled to his view", adding Mr Wang's case was in the hands of Australian law enforcement and intelligence agencies.
"I won't comment on specifics of an ASIO operational matter," he said.
A close up of treasurer Josh Frydenberg speaking
PHOTO The Treasurer said the case was in the hands of the relevant Australian officials. AAP: STEFAN POSTLES
"But what I will say is that the Government makes no apologies for the laws that we've introduced around foreign interference and foreign influence."
On Saturday, Mr Frydenberg had said the relevant Australian authorities were following up on the "sensitive matter".
"These are very disturbing reports and the matter is now in the hands of the appropriate law enforcement agencies so I wouldn't comment on the particulars of individual cases," he said.
"The Government makes no apologies for the measures we have taken to ensure that we have foreign interference laws in place."
Posted earlier today at 10:11am
 
ASIO investigating reports of Chinese plot to install agent in Parliament
Updated about 2 hours ago
A Chinese and Australian flag o a conference table
PHOTO The Liberal Party has said it 'takes foreign interference very seriously'. REUTERS: JASON LEE
Australia's spy agency ASIO is investigating reports that Chinese intelligence figures tried to plant one of its agents in Federal Parliament.
The man at the centre of these claims — luxury car dealer Nick Zhao — was found dead in a Melbourne motel room in March after reportedly approaching ASIO.
The explosive allegations aired on Nine's 60 Minutes last night.
Liberal MP and chairman of the Parliament's intelligence and security committee, Andrew Hastie, told Nine he'd heard about Mr Zhao several months ago.
"I heard that he was a 32-year-old Melbourne resident cultivated by the Chinese government to run as a Liberal Party candidate in the Commonwealth Parliament," Mr Hastie said.
"Nick Zhao is now dead."
The cause of Mr Zhao's death has reportedly not been determined. Mr Hastie wants a thorough investigation into what happened to him.
"This isn't just cash in a bag, you know, given for favours. This is a state-sponsored attempt to infiltrate our Parliament using an Australian citizen and basically run them as an agent of foreign influence in our democratic system," he said.
Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.
Video 0:39
We will not repent: Andrew Hastie on blocked China trip
ABC News
"This is really significant and Australians should be very, very concerned about this."
In a statement, ASIO's Director-General of Security Mike Burgess said the spy agency was taking the matter "seriously".
"Australians can be reassured that ASIO was previously aware of matters that have been reported today, and has been actively investigating them," he said.
"Given that the matter in question is subject to a coronial inquiry, and as not to prejudice our investigations, it would be inappropriate to comment further."
"Hostile foreign intelligence activity continues to pose a real threat to our nation and its security," Mr Burgess added.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison's office has also issued a statement saying the government took allegations of foreign interference and espionage "very seriously".
"We have taken strong action to equip our intelligence and security agencies to protect Australians and our institutions, including appointing the first National Counter Foreign Interference Coordinator, establishing the Foreign Influence Transparency Scheme and establishing the Electoral Integrity Assurance Taskforce," the statement said.
A spokesperson from the Liberal Party executive has also reiterated that the party "takes foreign interference very seriously".
Chinese spy points to further revelations
The revelations come as 60 Minutes also separately spoke with a would-be defector, Wang Liqiang, who claimed he worked as a Chinese spy.
Mr Wang shed light on espionage tactics he said Beijing used to sabotage the pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong and influencing the elections in Taiwan.
Wang Liqiang looks to the right as he sits mid-speech. He has glasses, wears a checked shirt and dark jacket.
PHOTO Wang Liqiang has alleged the Chinese Communist Party ordered overseas assassinations. SUPPLIED: 60 MINUTES AUSTRALIA
He also claimed his former spy boss had direct dealings with Huang Xiangmo — the businessman kicked out of Australia over his alleged ties to the Chinese Government.
But Mr Wang indicated that was just the tip of the iceberg.
"Huang Xiangmo is definitely a small potato compared with others I know," he said.
Mr Wang's asylum claim is being considered by the Australian Government. But the Chinese Embassy has accused him of being a fraudster.
Andrew Hastie said he should be granted protection and One Nation Senator Pauline Hanson said she agreed.
man in suit and glasses walking
PHOTO Chinese billionaire and property developer Huang Xiangmo. ABC NEWS
Other MPs were being more cautious, remaining concerned Mr Wang could be a double agent.
"I always like to know exactly who the whistleblower is," crossbencher Jacqui Lambie told Sky News.
"I also like to do massive background checks on where all that's coming from and exactly what's going on and make sure they're not going to try to infiltrate themselves into what's going on here in the country."
Co-editor at China Neican, Yun Jiang, said there were question marks over Mr Wang's motives and the timing of his defection.
"For example, why he's gone public," she said.
"I think that is quite an interesting topic because I think, from most people's thinking, is those kind of things you go straight to government departments.
"Why would you go to media?"
She said if Australia granted him asylum, Beijing would not be happy.
"It may also affect decisions of future defectors … people may be more willing to defect if the Australian Government does offer him protection."
Calls to protect Wang Liqiang
But the executive director of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, Peter Jennings, said Mr Wang was an important source of information and must be properly protected.
"I really don't care what comes from Beijing," Mr Jennings said.
"I think we spend far too much time in advance worrying about the punishment that is going to be meted out for Australia really operating according to its own values and looking after its national security issues."
Paul Keating gestures with one hand up and one pushing down, eyebrows raised looking at the ABC hosts.
PHOTO Paul Keating has been a firm critic of Australia's security agencies. ABC NEWS: TIMOTHY SWANSTON
He said this also showed former prime minister Paul Keating's comments about foreign policy just days ago were "delusional".
Mr Keating raised concerns about security agencies' approach to Beijing and said the media was engaging in anti-China "hysteria".
"Now we have, for the first time, direct and clear understandings from a Chinese intelligence operator himself about what China is doing in this country and around the world," Mr Jennings said.
"Really I think it's time Mr Keating hung up his hat on the public commentary on China because he's clearly out of date and doesn't understand the nature of the threat we're dealing with."
 
Would rather give Mr Wang the defector the benefit of the doubt than believe the Chicom bullshitters, like this little mad dog constantly barking lies at press conferences:

 
Would rather give Mr Wang the defector the benefit of the doubt than believe the Chicom bullshitters, like this little mad dog constantly barking lies at press conferences:


Only to be expected, the denial and counter propaganda.

Intelligence (with counter-intelligence) is a reality of geopolitics
 
And hiding under the radar are the ceca spies with full support from the pap gov.

With 6 strategically located ceca schools and ceca spies employed in key glc institutions,

the ceca intel have eyes and ears on every critical details necessary to subtly wield its influence and control over sg.
 
And hiding under the radar are the ceca spies with full support from the pap gov.

With 6 strategically located ceca schools and ceca spies employed in key glc institutions,

the ceca intel have eyes and ears on every critical details necessary to subtly wield its influence and control over sg.

I highly doubt CECA ah nehs are concerned with geopolitics in this area e.g. controlling the South China Sea and the Straits of Malacca. Or try to infiltrate the schools, the media and the local politics. :wink:

They are freeloaders and parasites, brought in by kleptocrats who signed a misguided trade agreement. That's all.

vtl6oru8vzv31.jpg
 
It should be malaya and not malaysia.


INSPIRING
Meet Blossom Wong, Malaysia’s Actual Cheongsam-Clad Female Spy Back in the 1950s
51754582_2142010699225768_7232525360808591360_n-48x48.jpg

Published
1 year ago
on
August 30, 2018
By
Veronica Elankovan
6 Things You Need to Know About This Bonafide M'sian Spy - WORLD OF BUZZ 10

Source: Quisomo
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Tap to listen to this article instead: Listen to Post
Forget Bond girls! Here’s a story of an actual woman spy who kicked ass while looking fly in a cheongsam.
Blossom Wong caught Malaysians’ attention when an old photograph of her donning a sultry cheongsam while escorting the 64th Attorney General of USA Robert F. Kennedy and his wife, Ethel, emerged from the internet.
Fun fact: She had also escorted other famous politicians like Madam Park, wife of S. Korean president Park Chung-hee; Japanese prime minister, Eisaku Sato and his wife; and the governor-general of New Zealand.
 
I highly doubt CECA ah nehs are concerned with geopolitics in this area e.g. controlling the South China Sea and the Straits of Malacca. Or try to infiltrate the schools, the media and the local politics. :wink:

They are freeloaders and parasites, brought in by kleptocrats who signed a misguided trade agreement. That's all.

vtl6oru8vzv31.jpg

A typical Hitler styled propaganda. :devilish::biggrin:
 
Alleged Chinese spy Wang Liqiang threatened on Christmas Eve over controversial revelations
A self-confessed Chinese intelligence operative seeking to defect to Australia was allegedly warned on Christmas Eve that he could be sent back to China and killed unless he publicly retracted his story.
Wang Liqiang caused an international scandal in November when he told The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and 60 Minutes that he had worked on behalf of a Beijing-directed foreign interference ring targeting independence and democracy movements in Hong Kong and Taiwan. Mr Wang fled to Australia to seek asylum and assist ASIO.
Wang Liqiang's case made headlines and prompted police action in Taiwan. Illustration: Mark Stehle, Photo: Steven Siewert Photo:
The Chinese government dismissed his claims as false and said he was a convicted criminal, while ASIO director-general Mike Burgess issued a rare statement saying his agency took claims of foreign interference seriously.
Australian security agencies have now learnt that Mr Wang received the first of a series of threats and inducements on Christmas Eve, according to sources with direct knowledge of the events who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
Defecting Chinese spy offers information trove to Australian government
Mr Wang could not be reached for comment and appears to have gone into hiding. However, the sources said he was told in a series of messages that his family would be spared punishment and his debts would be repaid if he gave a public statement retracting his claims about spying for China. The directives sent to Mr Wang appear to have been co-ordinated by a senior political operative in Taiwan and a businessman in China, according to sources and messages sighted by this masthead.
Mr Wang was provided with a script and told to record a video message in which he would falsely claim that Taiwan’s democratically elected governing party, the Democratic Progressive Party, had bribed him to lie by offering him “a large sum of money”. Such a video would be a controversial intervention in Taiwan's presidential election this weekend, where Chinese Communist Party influence and Mr Wang's claims of being ordered to disrupt the election have become a key political issue.
The Australian Federal Police is treating seriously alleged threats to Mr Wang, with sources confirming they opened an investigation in the hours after the first message was received on Christmas Eve.
"The Australian Federal Police is aware of threats made against a man currently residing in Australia," a spokesman said. "The AFP takes threats of this nature seriously and has commenced an investigation."
The AFP also said its Counter-Espionage and Special Investigations Taskforce was targeting "foreign interference activities ranging from covert influence campaigns to traditional espionage".
A video message
Taiwan's authorities are investigating Mr Wang's claims in November that he helped run a “cyber army” distributing pro-Beijing propaganda during municipal elections in 2018. One of the Facebook pages Mr Wang nominated as a covert propaganda tool was recently shut down by Facebook. He also said he had been ordered to interfere in the January 11 presidential election and that it was at this point he decided to defect.
Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen on the campaign trail.
Photo: AP
Sources familiar with the communications say that on Christmas Eve and over the following days, Mr Wang was told that he must record and release a video retracting those claims and instead implicate President Tsai Ing-wen's Democratic Progressive Party in bribery.
The two men suspected of co-ordinating the directives are controversial Taiwanese political figure Alex Tsai and a China-based businessman called Mr Sun. Mr Tsai is a former legislator and a current deputy secretary of Taiwan's main opposition party, the Kuomintang (KMT), which is opposing President Tsai in the election.
Mr Tsai is regarded as close to Beijing and was arrested and briefly detained in 2017 for alleged embezzlement.
Among the messages Mr Tsai allegedly sent Mr Wang are photos of Mr Tsai meeting Chinese President Xi Jinping. Mr Wang was told that if he followed the directives prior to the presidential election this Saturday he would be welcomed back to China or Taiwan, given financial benefits and have his family protected. If he did not comply, however, he was told he would be extradited to China to face death or even be targeted for reprisals in Australia.
The activity targeting Mr Wang appears aimed at swaying the outcome of Taiwan's presidential election by falsely implicating the governing party in corruption. If the DPP and President Tsai lost the election it would be a major coup for the Chinese government.
The script Mr Wang was instructed to read also includes a line in which he would recant allegations he made against businessman Xiang Xin, who Mr Wang claimed employed him in Hong Kong and led a Chinese Communist Party spy ring.
"About Xiang Xin, he is only an acquaintance I've met one or two times," the script read. "I implicated him and his wife in espionage together because he is the richest person and most high-status person I know."
China Innovation Investment officials Xiang Xin and his wife Gong Qing in Taiwan before they were detained in November.
Photo: EBC
After Mr Wang's spying claims were aired in Australia in November, Mr Xiang was prevented from leaving Taiwan by national security officials who began investigating him. Mr Xiang, who has deep ties to China's military technology sector, denies all wrongdoing.
The script Mr Wang was told to read states that he had conducted his November interview revealing his Taiwan spy allegations because a person from the DPP had "promised me ... the Democratic Progressive Party would guarantee that it would give me a large sum of money and sort out my asylum application in Australia or help me settle in Taiwan".
'Freely settle in Taiwan'
Sources have allowed The Age and Herald to view some of the messages sent to Mr Wang via intermediaries on various messaging applications. The initial approaches attempted to offer Mr Wang inducements in return for his co-operation. One message said, “if you take up the offer by the end of this month, everyone will help ensure you safely return to mainland China, and at the same time will help you resolve all your debts". Another said: “The KMT has agreed that they can let him freely settle in Taiwan.”
While Mr Tsai appears to have been prepared to offer only inducements to Mr Wang – namely, safe passage to Taiwan arranged by his political party – Mr Sun issued both threats and inducements. Messages obtained by The Age and the Herald also show Mr Sun and Mr Tsai communicating with each other and discussing how to deal with Mr Wang.
A message showing Alex Tsai and Mr Sun discussing Mr Wang.
Photo: Supplied
Sources alleged Mr Sun warned that Mr Wang could be extradited to China and killed or his family on the Chinese mainland punished if he did not co-operate. It is an offence under Australian foreign interference laws to infringe on the rights of a person in Australia such as an asylum seeker by using bribery or threats in order to advance the interests of a foreign power.
Interviewed on Wednesday afternoon, Mr Tsai said: "I have been in direct contact with Wang. My friend [Mr Sun] has also been in direct contact with him."
Mr Tsai denied acting inappropriately or having any involvement in urging Mr Wang to record a script implicating the DPP in corruption.
"I haven't asked him to put out any statement," Mr Tsai said. However, Mr Tsai sent Mr Sun a message in which he appears to refer to the script Mr Wang was to be directed to record.
Mr Sun said on Wednesday that he had written the script for Mr Wang to read.
Mr Sun described himself as a close friend of Xiang Xin but, contrary to Mr Tsai's interview and messages seen by The Age and Herald, denied being in contact with Mr Tsai.
While Mr Xiang has denied knowning Mr Wang, Mr Sun said the pair had met "once or twice". Mr Sun also confirmed that Mr Xiang had worked for the Chinese military. Mr Sun denied threatening Mr Wang or his family.
Seeking asylum
Mr Wang’s November television interview sparked a political firestorm in Taiwan. The Chinese government is seeking to reunify Taiwan with the mainland despite fierce opposition from the ruling DPP, and Chinese influence in Taiwan has become a key political issue.
 
Alleged Chinese spy Wang Liqiang threatened on Christmas Eve over controversial revelations
A self-confessed Chinese intelligence operative seeking to defect to Australia was allegedly warned on Christmas Eve that he could be sent back to China and killed unless he publicly retracted his story.
Wang Liqiang caused an international scandal in November when he told The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and 60 Minutes that he had worked on behalf of a Beijing-directed foreign interference ring targeting independence and democracy movements in Hong Kong and Taiwan. Mr Wang fled to Australia to seek asylum and assist ASIO.
Wang Liqiang's case made headlines and prompted police action in Taiwan. Illustration: Mark Stehle, Photo: Steven Siewert Photo:
The Chinese government dismissed his claims as false and said he was a convicted criminal, while ASIO director-general Mike Burgess issued a rare statement saying his agency took claims of foreign interference seriously.
Australian security agencies have now learnt that Mr Wang received the first of a series of threats and inducements on Christmas Eve, according to sources with direct knowledge of the events who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
Defecting Chinese spy offers information trove to Australian government
Mr Wang could not be reached for comment and appears to have gone into hiding. However, the sources said he was told in a series of messages that his family would be spared punishment and his debts would be repaid if he gave a public statement retracting his claims about spying for China. The directives sent to Mr Wang appear to have been co-ordinated by a senior political operative in Taiwan and a businessman in China, according to sources and messages sighted by this masthead.
Mr Wang was provided with a script and told to record a video message in which he would falsely claim that Taiwan’s democratically elected governing party, the Democratic Progressive Party, had bribed him to lie by offering him “a large sum of money”. Such a video would be a controversial intervention in Taiwan's presidential election this weekend, where Chinese Communist Party influence and Mr Wang's claims of being ordered to disrupt the election have become a key political issue.
The Australian Federal Police is treating seriously alleged threats to Mr Wang, with sources confirming they opened an investigation in the hours after the first message was received on Christmas Eve.
"The Australian Federal Police is aware of threats made against a man currently residing in Australia," a spokesman said. "The AFP takes threats of this nature seriously and has commenced an investigation."
The AFP also said its Counter-Espionage and Special Investigations Taskforce was targeting "foreign interference activities ranging from covert influence campaigns to traditional espionage".
A video message
Taiwan's authorities are investigating Mr Wang's claims in November that he helped run a “cyber army” distributing pro-Beijing propaganda during municipal elections in 2018. One of the Facebook pages Mr Wang nominated as a covert propaganda tool was recently shut down by Facebook. He also said he had been ordered to interfere in the January 11 presidential election and that it was at this point he decided to defect.
Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen on the campaign trail.
Photo: AP
Sources familiar with the communications say that on Christmas Eve and over the following days, Mr Wang was told that he must record and release a video retracting those claims and instead implicate President Tsai Ing-wen's Democratic Progressive Party in bribery.
The two men suspected of co-ordinating the directives are controversial Taiwanese political figure Alex Tsai and a China-based businessman called Mr Sun. Mr Tsai is a former legislator and a current deputy secretary of Taiwan's main opposition party, the Kuomintang (KMT), which is opposing President Tsai in the election.
Mr Tsai is regarded as close to Beijing and was arrested and briefly detained in 2017 for alleged embezzlement.
Among the messages Mr Tsai allegedly sent Mr Wang are photos of Mr Tsai meeting Chinese President Xi Jinping. Mr Wang was told that if he followed the directives prior to the presidential election this Saturday he would be welcomed back to China or Taiwan, given financial benefits and have his family protected. If he did not comply, however, he was told he would be extradited to China to face death or even be targeted for reprisals in Australia.
The activity targeting Mr Wang appears aimed at swaying the outcome of Taiwan's presidential election by falsely implicating the governing party in corruption. If the DPP and President Tsai lost the election it would be a major coup for the Chinese government.
The script Mr Wang was instructed to read also includes a line in which he would recant allegations he made against businessman Xiang Xin, who Mr Wang claimed employed him in Hong Kong and led a Chinese Communist Party spy ring.
"About Xiang Xin, he is only an acquaintance I've met one or two times," the script read. "I implicated him and his wife in espionage together because he is the richest person and most high-status person I know."
China Innovation Investment officials Xiang Xin and his wife Gong Qing in Taiwan before they were detained in November.
Photo: EBC
After Mr Wang's spying claims were aired in Australia in November, Mr Xiang was prevented from leaving Taiwan by national security officials who began investigating him. Mr Xiang, who has deep ties to China's military technology sector, denies all wrongdoing.
The script Mr Wang was told to read states that he had conducted his November interview revealing his Taiwan spy allegations because a person from the DPP had "promised me ... the Democratic Progressive Party would guarantee that it would give me a large sum of money and sort out my asylum application in Australia or help me settle in Taiwan".
'Freely settle in Taiwan'
Sources have allowed The Age and Herald to view some of the messages sent to Mr Wang via intermediaries on various messaging applications. The initial approaches attempted to offer Mr Wang inducements in return for his co-operation. One message said, “if you take up the offer by the end of this month, everyone will help ensure you safely return to mainland China, and at the same time will help you resolve all your debts". Another said: “The KMT has agreed that they can let him freely settle in Taiwan.”
While Mr Tsai appears to have been prepared to offer only inducements to Mr Wang – namely, safe passage to Taiwan arranged by his political party – Mr Sun issued both threats and inducements. Messages obtained by The Age and the Herald also show Mr Sun and Mr Tsai communicating with each other and discussing how to deal with Mr Wang.
A message showing Alex Tsai and Mr Sun discussing Mr Wang.
Photo: Supplied
Sources alleged Mr Sun warned that Mr Wang could be extradited to China and killed or his family on the Chinese mainland punished if he did not co-operate. It is an offence under Australian foreign interference laws to infringe on the rights of a person in Australia such as an asylum seeker by using bribery or threats in order to advance the interests of a foreign power.
Interviewed on Wednesday afternoon, Mr Tsai said: "I have been in direct contact with Wang. My friend [Mr Sun] has also been in direct contact with him."
Mr Tsai denied acting inappropriately or having any involvement in urging Mr Wang to record a script implicating the DPP in corruption.
"I haven't asked him to put out any statement," Mr Tsai said. However, Mr Tsai sent Mr Sun a message in which he appears to refer to the script Mr Wang was to be directed to record.
Mr Sun said on Wednesday that he had written the script for Mr Wang to read.
Mr Sun described himself as a close friend of Xiang Xin but, contrary to Mr Tsai's interview and messages seen by The Age and Herald, denied being in contact with Mr Tsai.
While Mr Xiang has denied knowning Mr Wang, Mr Sun said the pair had met "once or twice". Mr Sun also confirmed that Mr Xiang had worked for the Chinese military. Mr Sun denied threatening Mr Wang or his family.
Seeking asylum
Mr Wang’s November television interview sparked a political firestorm in Taiwan. The Chinese government is seeking to reunify Taiwan with the mainland despite fierce opposition from the ruling DPP, and Chinese influence in Taiwan has become a key political issue.

The Chicom propaganda machinery called him a fake spy and charlatan just hours after the 60 Minutes Australia interview was aired.

Fake spy, and yet death threats were sent to him. :rolleyes:
 
The Chicom propaganda machinery called him a fake spy and charlatan just hours after the 60 Minutes Australia interview was aired.

Fake spy, and yet death threats were sent to him. :rolleyes:
Tat just means the chicoms are giving him credibility. Well said
 
Send all the chinese people home. Hiw many engineers snd scientist, Chinese US citizens who after several decades, jumped ship back to china and revealed the technology they were working on!
 
Send all the chinese people home. Hiw many engineers snd scientist, Chinese US citizens who after several decades, jumped ship back to china and revealed the technology they were working on!

Sinkieland got what technology? Creative Soundblaster? SAR21 rifle? EZ-Link fare card?
 
Hahaha.
Who wants to spy here. This small country little resources small population. :biggrin: :biggrin: :biggrin:

Strategic location at the mouth of the Straits of Malacca. Especially important for conquering the South China Sea.
 
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