The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has been using Chinese expatriates and Japanese experts to steal state-of-the-art technology for the Chinese regime, Japanese reports have revealed.
After being questioned, these people leave Japan without indictment.
This is the most recent case of CCP espionage in Japan being exposed by Japanese police.
The man allegedly admitted to Japanese police that he had stolen the data and left Japan after the interview.
A former Japanese intelligence officer has called for Japan to ramp up legislative efforts to stop the leaking of technology, by checking the backgrounds of those who have access to confidential information.
Over the past few years, Japan has become a major target for technology theft by the CCP owing to technology bans imposed by the United States on China.
“It is imperative [for Japan] to establish a security clearance system as soon as possible, which would require that only those who pass the clearance have access to classified information,” said Masatoshi Fujitani, visiting professor at the Kanazawa Institute of Technology and senior researcher at the Economic Security Management Agency.
Fujitani previously worked at the Public Security Intelligence Agency, which researches and analyses international terrorism, China, North Korea, Russia, and economic security.
Fujitani told the Chinese edition of The Epoch Times that the communist regime’s Ministry of Commerce (MOC) decides which technology it needs, and the Ministry of Public Security executes the espionage.
Smart agriculture is included in the MOC’s 2022 Catalog of Industries Encouraging Foreign Investment, which uses modern technologies to strengthen productivity. The data the Chinese man sent back to China are reportedly “related to a program installed on a device used to maintain the appropriate environment needed to grow agricultural products, including the temperature inside greenhouses and soil moisture.”
The MOC is not the only department that conducts industrial espionage in Japan, according to Fujitani.
Besides the MOC, the Ministry of Science and Technology also sends technical officials to the Chinese Embassy to collect and analyze technical intelligence from the host country.
‘Human Wave Tactics’
The CCP uses Chinese citizens in its espionage activities, which is stipulated in Article Seven of China’s National Intelligence Law, effective in June 2017, obliging Chinese people and companies to cooperate with the regime’s intelligence agencies. The CCP calls the strategy “human wave tactics” owing to the huge number of civilians possibly involved.Under such a law, any Chinese people in Japan can be made spies for the CCP, even if they do not like the CCP.
The law’s enactment has sparked concern in Japan.
Fujitani expressed concern over the absence of anti-spy laws in Japan and the lack of manpower in Japan’s intelligence agencies.
“As Japan does not have an anti-spy law, it is impossible for Japan to enforce the law against [Chinese] espionage, which can be treated as a violation of immigration control law, theft, and other minor crimes,” Fujitani said, adding that the CCP’s extensive spying activities involve both Chinese residents and Japanese citizens.
Chinese Student Turned Into Spy
The CCP uses patriotism to instigate international students to perform industrial or military espionage for the regime.In Japan in 2021, a 36-year-old suspect, identified as Wang Jianbin, was a former student studying in Japan. He was allegedly acting under the direction of the wife of a member of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army’s (PLA’s) cyberwarfare Unit 61419.
Wang devised a fake company and an alias to attempt to illegally purchase advanced Japanese security software that is sold only to Japanese businesses. However, the company that sells the software found discrepancies in Wang’s application and rejected the transaction.
Japanese Researcher Leaks Information to Chinese Company
Reports show that the CCP also targets Japanese experts for confidential information via social media platforms.In one case, a former Japanese researcher for a leading Japanese chemical firm allegedly leaked confidential information to a major Chinese electronic component manufacturer in China’s southern Guangdong Province.
He admitted to the charges, Asahi Shimbun reported.
Sekisui dismissed the man in May 2019.