Tory MPs urge tougher action on China after
cyber-attacks
Senior Tories say ministers not holding China to
account after Beijing targeted elections watchdog and politicians
Pippa
Crerar and Eleni Courea
Mon 25 Mar
2024 19.16 GMT
Tory MPs
have urged ministers to take a tougher approach towards China after the
security services confirmed Beijing-backed hackers were responsible for a
cyber-attack targeting the UK elections watchdog and a surveillance operation
on British politicians.
The Chinese
ambassador will be summoned to explain his country’s actions, which resulted in
Beijing allegedly accessing the personal details of about 40 million voters,
held by the Electoral Commission.
The
National Cyber Security Centre, part of GCHQ, also found that four British
parliamentarians who have been critical of Beijing were targeted in a separate
attack.
Two
individuals and a front company linked to the cyber-espionage group APT31,
which is associated with the Chinese ministry of state security, have been hit
with sanctions by the UK as a result.
Oliver
Dowden, the deputy prime minister, told MPs that Beijing’s attempts to
interfere with UK democracy and politics had not been successful, and that the
government had bolstered its cyber-defence since the attacks.
“We will
not hesitate to take swift and robust actions wherever the Chinese government
threatens the United Kingdom’s interests,” he said. “The UK judges that these
actions demonstrate a clear and persistent pattern of behaviour that signals
hostile intent from China.”
The US, who
also imposed a range of sanctions, and New Zealand said they supported the UK’s
move.
Merrick
Garland, the US attorney general, said the case “serves as a reminder of the
ends to which the Chinese government is willing to go to target and intimidate
its critics, including launching malicious cyber-operations aimed at
threatening the national security of the United States and our allies”.
The
disclosure marks a new low point in Beijing-London relations. Conservative MPs
urged the government to take tougher action against Beijing and to add top
Chinese officials to a register of hostile state actors.
The
parliamentarians whose email accounts were targeted in the attempted hack,
which is believed to have involved sophisticated spear-phishing, were prominent
critics of China.
All four
were members of the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, an international
network of legislators with a hawkish stance on Beijing. They included the
former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith, the former minister Tim Loughton, the
Scottish National party MP Stewart McDonald and the crossbench peer David
Alton.
At a press
conference after a meeting with parliament’s head of security on Monday, the
three MPs called for China to be formally labelled a threat to UK security.
Duncan
Smith said he and colleagues had been “subjected to harassment, impersonation
and attempted hacking from China for some time” but MPs would not be “bullied
into silence by Beijing”.
He added:
“We must now enter a new era of relations with China, dealing with the
contemporary Chinese Communist party as it really is, not as we would wish it
to be.”
Robert
Jenrick, the former immigration minister, said: “The government clearly is not
holding China to account for their attack on our democracy. Taking three years
to sanction two individuals and a small company is derisory. This feeble
response will only embolden China to continue its aggression towards the UK.”
Another
Tory MP, Alicia Kearns, who chairs the foreign affairs committee, said: “This
is sadly insufficient given the severity of the attack and the intent behind
them. Two individuals and one firm is not deterrence. We need import controls
and a comprehensive sanctions regime now.”
The
government was also criticised for being too slow to respond to the
cyber-attacks, which took place between 2021 and 2022.
Duncan
Smith described the UK response as “like an elephant giving birth to a mouse”
while McDonald accused ministers of “turning up at a gun fight with a wooden
spoon”.
Luke de
Pulford, the executive director of the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China,
said the government “was a little bit reluctant to say that China had actually
done this”.
David
Cameron has raised the cyber-attacks on Britain’s democratic institutions
directly with Wang Yi, the Chinese foreign minister. The foreign secretary
addressed Tory MPs on the issue at a meeting of the backbench 1922 committee on
Monday evening.
The former
prime minister, who was closely associated with the “golden era” of UK-China
relations, has faced questions over his own role in a Beijing-backed
development scheme in Sri Lanka. He faced criticism from Labour on Monday for
meeting only Tory MPs.
Lord
Cameron said: “It is completely unacceptable that China state-affiliated
organisations and individuals have targeted our democratic institutions and
political processes.
“While
these attempts to interfere with UK democracy have not been successful, we will
remain vigilant and resilient to the threats we face. We will always defend
ourselves from those who seek to threaten the freedoms that underpin our values
and democracy.”
The two
Chinese nationals were named as Zhao Guangzong and Ni Gaobin and the company as
Wuhan Xiaoruizhi Science and Technology. Under the sanctions, their assets will
be frozen and UK citizens and businesses barred from handling their funds or
resources, while they will be subject to a travel ban to the UK.
Pat
McFadden, the shadow Cabinet Office minister, said he supported “efforts to
counter attempts by China or any other state to interfere with or undermine the
democratic process, or attempts to stop elected representatives going about
their business, voicing their opinions or casting their votes without fear or
favour.”
Labour has
warned China it will act against interference in British democracy if it wins
the next election, the Guardian has learned. Catherine West, the shadow Asia
minister, travelled to Beijing last week for the first meeting between the
opposition and the Chinese government since Keir Starmer became leader.
China
rejected the accusations. “The so-called cyber-attacks by China against the UK
are completely fabricated and malicious slanders. We strongly oppose such
accusations,” a spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Britain said.
“China has
always firmly fought all forms of cyber-attacks according to law. China does
not encourage, support or condone cyber-attacks.”
A
parliamentary researcher, Chris Cash, who worked for the China Research Group,
an organisation co-founded by Tom Tugendhat, now the security minister, was
arrested over allegations of spying last year.
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