China
jails two for selling military secrets, including details of aircraft
carrier
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[March 10, 2015]
BEIJING (Reuters) - China has jailed
two men for selling military secrets, including hundreds of photos of
the country's lone aircraft carrier, to foreign spies, state media
reported on Friday, without saying which countries were buying them.
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The state-controlled Dalian Daily said foreign intelligence
services paid the men to send thousands of photos of military
targets and projects, as well as recordings and other information.
Both were young, "ordinary workers" who used their access to
military bases in Dalian, in the northeast, the paper said. One of
the men, surnamed Han, was lured by a person posing as a journalist
on a popular mobile chat application.
"The enemy hidden on the front lines has shown itself. In recent
years foreign spies have used the internet as a battlefield for
inciting rebellion within the enemy camp, and some young internet
users have become the targets," the paper said. "The methods of the
enemy may be cunning, but actually it is completely possible to
guard against them."
The other, a 23-year-old surnamed Zhang, traveled to an air show in
Beijing last summer and took hundreds of photographs of the Liaoning
aircraft carrier. He also collected materials there at the behest of
a foreign intelligence operative, the paper said.
They were eventually caught by public security authorities. Han was
sentenced to 8 years in prison on January 29 and Zhang was sentenced
to six years on February 12, the paper said.
China's Ministry of Defense did not respond to a request for
comment.
In a similar case in November, a man was arrested for taking photos
of an aircraft carrier base in the coastal city of Qingdao and
selling them to a foreigner.
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Counterintelligence officials quoted by state media said at the time
that more young Chinese internet users are being recruited by
foreign spies to gather military intelligence.
China and the United States frequently trade accusations of hacking
and cyber spying, increasing tension between the two countries.
China's state secrets law is notoriously broad, covering everything
from industry data to the exact birth dates of state leaders.
Information can also be labeled a state secret retroactively.
(Reporting by Megha Rajagopalan; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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