Taiwanese authorities suspect some of the most recent bomb threats targeting New York-based Shen Yun Performing Arts are linked to a research entity of Chinese tech giant Huawei, The Epoch Times has learned.
In Taiwan, government offices and hosting venues in several cities have received at least 17 emails recently threatening various forms of detonating explosives or mass shootings to scare off the performances.
The senders have used a jump host to make it appear that they are from countries such as France, the United States, and elsewhere.
But Taiwan’s Criminal Investigation Bureau, through a multi-agency investigation, says it traced the emails back to Xi’an, capital of Shaanxi Province in central China. The emails appear to have originated from around the location of Huawei Xi’an Institute, a research center of the company that is now at the forefront in aiding Beijing’s global tech ambitions, Taiwanese authorities confirmed.
The organization, situated in a state-level high-tech development zone, became a prime suspect in Taiwan’s investigation. Taiwanese authorities pointed to the institute as the most consequential entity in the vicinity; they also didn’t rule out the possibility that Chinese state-funded internet trolls—also known as the 50 Cent Army—were behind the campaign.
A spokesperson for the bureau told The Epoch Times that they have shared the details with mainland authorities but received no response.
Huawei didn’t reply to The Epoch Times’ request for comment.
Taiwanese authorities said the intimidation fits the pattern of efforts by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to interfere with normal functions in the democratic-ruling island, and they called for local government agencies to heighten their alert. They said they have enhanced security measures and are closely communicating with organizations that reported such incidents.
Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.), who co-launched the congressional Victims of Communism Caucus on April 10 to honor the lives killed under communism, said that the threats to Shen Yun highlight the importance of the legislative group.
“We want to make sure that we get the word out that communists across this country are not only not in the majority, but are representative of failed states,” she told The Epoch Times.
“They oppress their people; they are a lie.
“Everything about the Chinese Communist regime is built on a lie and built on government control.”
Part of the goal of the caucus, she said, is about “making sure that cultural groups like [Shen Yun are] able to continue to really show the vibrancy of the Chinese people, who we know if they had an opportunity to reject communism would be able to live in freedom.”
The findings from Taiwanese authorities are a step forward in countering similar transnational repression operations, according to Sarah Cook, an independent researcher who has decades of experience on human rights issues.
It shows “there are tools that would allow law enforcement agencies to trace these kinds of threats back to China, even if the perpetrator is using a VPN,” she told The Epoch Times, referring to encrypted virtual private networks, which enable users to mask their real IP addresses.
“I would hope that the U.S. and other governments would use those, given the number of threats that Shen Yun and Falun Gong have been facing outside of Taiwan.”
Levi Browde, executive director of the Falun Dafa Information Center, has been tracking such threats over the past year. He urged U.S. and Taiwanese officials to continue investigating the issue and hold the perpetrators to account.