UK 
		should be concerned at Chinese gene data harvesting, lawmaker says
			
   
            
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		[July 22, 2021]  
		By Alistair Smout 
		 
		LONDON (Reuters) - The harvesting of 
		genetic data from millions of women by a Chinese company through 
		prenatal tests is concerning and Britain should debate how privacy can 
		be protected from "surveillance autocracy", a senior British lawmaker 
		told Reuters. 
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			 A Reuters review of scientific papers and company statements found 
			that BGI Group developed the tests in collaboration with the Chinese 
			military and is using them to collect genetic data for sweeping 
			research on the traits of populations. 
			 
			"I'm always concerned when data leaves the United Kingdom, that it 
			should be treated with the respect and privacy that we would expect 
			here at home, and the concern that this raises is that it may not be 
			so," Tom Tugendhat, chairman of the British parliament's Foreign 
			Affairs Select Committee, told Reuters. 
			 
			"The connections between Chinese genomics firms and the Chinese 
			military do not align with what we would normally expect in the 
			United Kingdom or indeed many other countries." 
			
			  
			The privacy policy on the website for the prenatal test, sold under 
			the brand name NIFTY in Britain, says data collected can be shared 
			when it is "directly relevant to national security or national 
			defense security" in China. 
			 
			BGI says it has never shared data for national security purposes and 
			has never been asked to. 
			
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			Tugendhat is one of nine British lawmakers who has been sanctioned 
			by China for highlighting alleged human rights abuses in Xinjiang, 
			which Beijing describes as "lies and disinformation". 
			He co-leads the China Research Group, a group of Conservative 
			lawmakers which looks to rebalance the strategic relationship with 
			China. 
			 
			He said that any British companies using the tests should be clear 
			where the data is going, who holds it, and what access others, 
			including other governments, would have to it. 
			 
			"Unless a company has done that, I think it's perfectly reasonable 
			for British people to be extremely concerned with these 
			connections," he said. 
			 
			(Reporting by Alistair Smout; Editing by Kate Holton) 
			  
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