
British Court Jails Two for Spying for China, Malaysia Fines Scam Ring
A former UK border official and his handler received prison terms for shadow policing Hong Kong dissidents, while a Malaysian court fined six Chinese and Taiwanese nationals for an online love scam.
A British court has handed down the first prison sentences under the 2023 National Security Act for assisting a foreign intelligence service, jailing two dual Chinese-British nationals for spying on Hong Kong pro-democracy activists in the United Kingdom. Peter Wai, a 40-year-old former Border Force officer, was sentenced to 10 years, while his handler, 65-year-old retired Hong Kong police superintendent Bill Yuen, received eight years. The pair had conducted what prosecutors termed “shadow policing” — covert surveillance and intimidation of UK-based dissidents on behalf of Chinese and Hong Kong authorities. Wai abused his access to Home Office computer systems to gather intelligence, and the operation included a failed attempt to abduct a fraud suspect from her flat in West Yorkshire. Sentencing at the Old Bailey, Judge Bobbie Cheema-Grub described the harm as “real and significant,” leaving victims in “fear and distress.”
Viewed from London, the convictions mark a watershed in the UK’s effort to counter foreign interference. The National Security Act, rushed through parliament amid mounting anxiety over hostile state activity, had never before been used to punish espionage for China. The trial revealed that Yuen, operating from the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in London, relayed orders from Hong Kong and Beijing to Wai, who compiled dossiers on dissidents. The case has further strained already fragile UK-China relations, with analysts in European capitals watching closely for evidence of how Beijing leverages dual nationals and former officials to extend its security apparatus abroad. In Paris and Rome, the shadow policing tactic is seen as part of a broader pattern of transnational repression targeting overseas Chinese communities.
In a separate development that underscores the breadth of Chinese-linked illicit activity overseas, a Malaysian court fined six foreign nationals — five Chinese and one Taiwanese — for operating an international online love scam from Penang. The syndicate targeted victims across Malaysia, China, and Taiwan, using fraudulent romantic overtures to extract money. The accused pleaded guilty and were fined under the penal code, avoiding jail time. Viewed from Southeast Asia, the case highlights the region’s vulnerability to cyber-enabled fraud networks often run by Chinese-speaking operatives, a persistent concern for local law enforcement.
The convergence of these cases — one state-directed espionage, the other a criminal enterprise — illustrates the multifaceted challenge posed by Chinese-linked operations abroad. For Western governments, the UK verdict provides a legal template for countering foreign intelligence infiltration, though it risks retaliatory measures from Beijing. In Asia, the scam case reinforces calls for greater cross-border cooperation against transnational fraud. As geopolitical tensions persist, such prosecutions are likely to become more frequent, testing both diplomatic ties and the resilience of national security frameworks.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
Two Hong Kong residents linked to the city's trade office in London have been sentenced to up to ten years for espionage. The case is portrayed as a politically motivated prosecution under the UK's new anti-interference law, targeting individuals with ties to Hong Kong rather than mainland China. The narrative suggests skepticism about the charges and sympathy for the convicted men.
Two men have been convicted in the UK for spying on behalf of China, marking the first such case under the country's new National Security Act. The report calmly details the sentences handed down by the Old Bailey court, presenting the event as a straightforward application of the law without overt editorializing.
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