China operating over 100 police stations across the world with the help of some host nations - report
This picture taken on March 22, 2021, shows the entrance of the China embassy in the The Hague. The Netherlands, along with Ireland, has shut down the Chinese police station found on its territory.
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Beijing has set up more
than 100 so-called overseas police stations across the globe to
monitor, harass and in some cases repatriate Chinese citizens living in exile,
using bilateral security arrangements struck with countries in Europe and
Africa to gain a widespread presence internationally, a new report shared
exclusively with CNN alleges.
Madrid-based human rights campaigner Safeguard Defenders
says it found evidence China was operating 48 additional police
stations abroad since the group first revealed the existence of 54 such
stations in September.
Its new release – dubbed “Patrol and Persuade” – focuses
on the scale of the network and examines the role that joint policing
initiatives between China and several European nations, including Italy,
Croatia, Serbia and Romania have played in piloting a wider expansion of
Chinese overseas stations than was known until the organization’s revelations
came out.
Among the fresh claims leveled by the group: that a
Chinese citizen was coerced into returning home by operatives working
undercover in a Chinese overseas police station in a Paris suburb, expressly
recruited for that purpose, in addition to an earlier disclosure that two more
Chinese exiles have been forcibly returned from Europe – one in Serbia, the
other in Spain.
Safeguard Defenders, which combs open-source, official
Chinese documents for evidence of alleged human rights abuses, said it has
identified four different police jurisdictions of China’s Ministry of Public
Security active across at least 53 countries, spanning all four corners of the
globe, ostensibly to help expatriates from those parts of China with their
needs abroad.
Beijing has denied it is running undeclared police forces
outside its territory, with its Ministry of Foreign Affairs telling CNN in
November: “We hope that relevant parties stop hyping it up to create tensions.
Using this as a pretext to smear China is unacceptable.” Instead, China has
claimed the facilities are administrative hubs, set up to help Chinese
expatriates with tasks like renewing their driver’s licenses. China has
also said the offices were a response to the Covid-19 pandemic, which had
left many citizens locked down in other countries and locked out of China,
unable to renew documentation.
When approached by CNN
last month about Safeguard Defenders’ original allegations, China’s foreign
affairs ministry said the overseas stations were staffed by volunteers.
However, the organization’s latest report claims one police network it examined
had hired 135 people for its first 21 stations.
The organization also sourced a three-year contract for a
worker hired at an overseas station in Stockholm.
Undeclared consular activities outside of a nation’s
official diplomatic missions are highly unusual and illegal, unless a host
nation has given their explicit consent, and the Safeguard Defenders report
claims China’s overseas offices predate the pandemic by several years.
Their reports have prompted investigations in at least 13
different countries so far and enflamed an increasingly heated diplomatic
tussle between China and nations like Canada, home to a large Chinese diaspora.
China isn’t the only superpower to be accused of employing
extrajudicial means to reach targets for law enforcement or for the purposes of
political persecution abroad.
Russia, for instance, has
on two occasions been accused of deploying lethal chemical and radioactive
substances on British soil to try to assassinate its former spies – allegations Russia
has always denied.
In the United States, the CIA was embroiled in a
scandal over the extraordinary rendition of terrorism suspects from the
streets of Italy to Guantanamo Bay after 9/11.
Yet the suggestion of widescale repression of Chinese
citizens in foreign countries comes at a pivotal time for a nation contending
with its own unrest at home, amid fatigue at the country’s restrictive
zero-Covid policy, as leader Xi Jinping’s third term in power gets under way.
Last week, China indicated it would loosen some of its pandemic restrictions,
three years after the onset of Covid-19.
As the second largest economy in the world, China has
developed a deepening relationship with many of the countries where the new
police stations have been allegedly found, raising awkward questions for
national governments balancing commercial interests against national security.
Italy, which signed a series of bilateral security deals
with China over successive governments since 2015, has kept largely silent
during the revelations of alleged activities on its soil.
Between 2016 and 2018 Italian police conducted multiple
joint patrols with Chinese police – first in Rome and Milan – and later in
other cities including Naples where at the same time, Safeguard Defenders says,
it has found evidence that a video surveillance system was added to a Chinese
residential area ostensibly “to effectively deter crimes there.”
In 2016, an Italian police official told NPR that
joint policing would “lead to a wider international cooperation, exchange of
information and sharing resources to combat the criminal and terrorist groups
that afflict our countries.”
The NGO determines Italy has hosted 11 Chinese police
stations, including in Venice and in Prato, near Florence.
One ceremony in Rome to mark the opening of a new station
was attended by Italian police officials in 2018, according to videos posted on
Chinese websites, demonstrating the close ties between police forces in the two
countries.
Earlier this year, the
Italian newspaper La Nazione reported local investigations into one of the
stations had not unearthed any illegal activity. Il Foglio quoted police chiefs
as saying recently that the stations did not present any particular concern as
they appeared to be merely bureaucratic.
Italy’s foreign and interior ministries did not reply to
questions from CNN.
China also struck similar joint police patrol agreements
with Croatia and Serbia between 2018 and 2019 as part of the nation’s
increasing strategic footprint along the path of Xi’s defining foreign policy,
dubbed the Belt and Road Initiative.
Chinese officers were seen on a joint patrol with their
Croatian counterparts on the streets of the capital Zagreb as recently as July
of this year, Chinese media reported.
A Zagreb police official interviewed by Xinhua said the
patrols were essential for “protecting and attracting foreign tourists.”
A 2019 report from Reuters said Chinese officers had
joined Serbian officers on patrol in Belgrade to help address the influx of
Chinese tourists. One Serbian officer noted the Chinese didn’t have the power
to make arrests.
Safeguard Defenders also says Chinese stations were able
to get a toehold in South Africa, and in nearby nations thanks to a similar
accord with Pretoria, in place for years.
China began laying the foundations for closer policing
ties with South Africa’s law enforcement agencies almost two decades ago, later
setting up a network of what are officially called “Overseas Chinese Service
Centers” in cooperation with the government of South Africa thanks to
successive bilateral security agreements.
China’s consulate in Cape Town has said the plan
“unites all the communities, both South Africans and foreign citizens in South
Africa.”
Since its establishment, the framework “has been actively
preventing crimes against the community and reducing the number of cases
significantly,” the consulate has said while noting that the centers are
non-profit associations with no “law enforcement authority.”
South African government officials have frequently been
featured by Chinese media expressing support for the centers and saying their
work has helped police deepen their relationship with Chinese expatriates who
live there, according to a 2019 report from the Jamestown China
Brief.
CNN reached out to the South African Police Service, but
it has not yet received comment.
Safeguard Defenders stumbled on the police
networks while trying to assess the scale of China’s efforts to persuade some
of its people to return to China even against their will, which, based on
official Chinese data, could number almost a quarter of a million people around
the world during the time Xi has been in power.
“What we see coming from China is increasing attempts to
crack down on dissent everywhere in the world, to threaten people, harass
people, make sure that they are fearful enough so that they remain silent or
else face being returned to China against their will,” said Safeguard Defenders
Campaign director Laura Harth.
“It will start with phone calls. They might start to
intimidate your relatives back in China, to threaten you, do everything really
to coax the targets abroad to come back. If that doesn’t work, they will use
covert agents abroad. They will send them from Beijing and use methods such as
luring and entrapment,” Harth said.
The French interior ministry declined to comment on the
allegation that a Chinese citizen was coerced into returning home by a Chinese
police station in a Paris suburb.
The revelations have prompted vocal outrage in some
countries and conspicuous silence in others.
Last month, FBI Director Christopher Wray told a
Homeland Security Committee he was deeply concerned about the revelations. “It
is outrageous to think that the Chinese police would attempt to set up shop,
you know, in New York, let’s say, without proper coordination. It violates
sovereignty and circumvents standard judicial and law enforcement cooperation
processes,” he said.
Ireland has shut down the Chinese police station found on
its territory, while the Netherlands, which has taken similar measures, has a
probe underway, as does Spain.
Harth told CNN the organization will likely find more
stations in the future. “It’s the tip of the iceberg,” she said.
“China is not hiding what it is doing. They expressly say
that they are going to expand these operations so let’s take that seriously.
“This is a moment when countries have to consider that it’s a question of upholding the rule of law and human rights in their countries as much for people from China, as for everyone else around the world,” she said.


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