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CCP's Means of Controlling Oversea Chinese Communities and Infiltrating Mainstream Society Exposed in Canada (Photos) By Minghui/Clearwisdom correspondent Yong Xin from Ottawa
(Clearwisdom.net) On June 6, 2007, at a press conference in the Canadian
Parliament, Mr. Chen Yonglin, former Chinese diplomat from the Sydney Consulate,
exposed the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) means of controlling Chinese
communities and media outside of China, in order to infiltrate Western
mainstream society and influence the Chinese community through Chinese embassies
and consulates. He also discussed the manner in which the CCP intimidates and
seduces Western politicians to persecute Falun Gong and other dissidents. Mr. Chen Yonglin exposes the CCP's means of
controlling Chinese communities and infiltrating Western mainstream society Mr. Chen pointed out that the Chinese Federation of Associations, the
Confederation of Chinese Organizations, Peaceful Reunification Association, and
other Chinese associations were actually set up and controlled by CCP
authorities. Mr. David Harris, Senior Fellow for National Security with the
Canadian Coalition for Democracies, analyzes the impact of Chinese foreign
intelligence on Canadian society On May 1, Jim Judd, Director of Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS),
told a Senate committee that around fifteen countries dispatch intelligence
agents to Canada. He admitted indirectly that the number of agents from China
was on top and half of the efforts of CSIS deal with Chinese agents. Mr. David
Harris, Senior Fellow for National Security with the Canadian Coalition for
Democracies, and former Chief of Strategic Planning at CSIS, analyzed the impact
of Chinese intelligence on Canadian society from three different levels. CCP places Falun Gong as top issue Mr. Chen said in an interview that there are political sections in Chinese
embassies and consulates monitoring and suppressing overseas dissident
organizations, including Falun Gong, Taiwan activists, democracy dissents, and
Tibet and Xinjiang activists. In the press conference, Mr. Chen said, "Chinese diplomacy is actually
an extension of domestic policy. Now the CCP mainly deals with Falun Gong
because there is a huge number of practitioners, who act unanimously because of
their belief." The CCP spends sixty percent of its effort to deal with
Falun Gong, and has even set up a special group in embassies and consulate to
persecute Falun Gong. Mr. Chen showed a document from the Sydney General Consulate dated February
7, 2001 with the title, "Task Assignment of Special Group against Falun
Gong." The group consisted of the head of each department, including
political investigation, culture, visa, Chinese nationals in foreign country,
and the education departments. There were concrete assignments and cooperation
to suppress Falun Gong. He pointed out that the head of the group was the
ambassador or the general consul. Chinese community and media are used In the press conference, Mr. Chen said, "In Canada, an organization
called the National Congress of Chinese Canadians, NCCC, is the top of the
umbrella structure of Chinese intelligence activity. Also, most of the Chinese
student associations in the universities in Australia, the US, and Canada
actually were set up by the Chinese Education Section and funded by the Chinese
overseas mission." Regarding the overseas Chinese media, Mr. Chen said, "The penetrative
control of the Chinese media is quite serious and strong. The media is supported
through directed investment and joint cooperation, for example, Australia Singdao
Daily." Mr. Chen gave as an example, how in April 2001, about over 40 Chinese local
community organizations petitioned the then-Canadian Prime Minister Jean
Chretien and Foreign Affairs Minister John Manley to defame Falun Gong and
alleged that Falun Gong damaged China-Canada bilateral relations. The CCP sent
the information to embassies and consulates in each country, saying that the
Chinese Embassy and Consulate in Canada did a good job and others must learn
from them. Influencing Mainstream Society Politicians through Various Means Including
Sexual Blackmail Mr. Harris said in interview, "China is as renowned as a foreign
intelligence service aggressor as it is a police state, and so we know that it
is a practitioner of extensive infiltration in Canada and abroad. The
infiltration efforts are aimed at a number of objectives including influencing
national policy, through compromise, through general influence operations and
propaganda, but also through some of the more dirty arts, as we have seen what
compromise can amount to sexually and in other terms." Mr. Chen gave an example of the blackmailing of an Australian Member of
Parliament (MP). The MP had sex with a girl under 16 in China. He was
immediately detained, recorded and released without any publicity. Later, he
actually worked hard and spoke on TV on public occasions for the Chinese
government. Mr. Chen said in answer to a reporter's questions, "When the
important delegations go to China, they are under strict surveillance and if
necessary, the CCP will set some traps regardless of whether the delegations are
from Australia or Canada." Mr. Harris said on this issue, "In China and in some other totalitarian
countries, the sex trap methodology is so advanced and very effectively played.
It's important as a result to remember that major hotels in China, especially
those visited by Western officials, are owned by the People's Liberation Army.
These hotels have been wired extensively and effectively to the extent that a
few years ago there was a contractual argument between a Western contractor and
China. He didn't realize that included in the contract was obligation to infect
hotel rooms with wires for bugs and communication. It is quite inappropriate
from both a national security viewpoint and from a viewpoint of visiting China.
Remember when you are in your most intimate moments in a hotel room in China,
you are in show biz." Chinese Aggressive Intelligence Activity Breaches Canadian Sovereignty Mr. Harris analyzed the influence of Chinese intelligence to Canada. He said,
"Any kind of adverse activity represents a breach of our Canadian
sovereignty, and our self-determination, and not least our criminal and other
laws. To that extent, it suggests the risk that Canadian laws are not fully run
in this country, and that is a profound problem of jurisdiction and
independence." Mr. Harris continued, "It also means that in terms of the constitutional
rights of all our citizens, those Canadians, specifically Chinese Canadians who
are intimidated by foreign influences under the direction of the CCP, are not
able to enjoy all of their Charter rights under our Constitution, and that is a
manifestly unacceptable situation. "Beyond this, there are of course economic and related considerations of
basic national health. We know that China has an aggressive foreign intelligence
competitive espionage. This then risks damaging the economic wellbeing of the
country, compromising trade and other secrets and sensitive information and
overall damaging our competitive position in the world." At the beginning of May, mainstream media including Canadian Press, the Toronto
Star, and The Globe and Mail reported on the issue of foreign
intelligence. The Globe and Mail stated, "The CSIS director was
reluctant to point to any particular source of foreign spies. 'I won't name
specific countries,' he said. 'There are maybe 15 countries that would be of
interest to us in that regard.' But Colin Kenney, the chairman of the Senate
Committee on National Security and Defence, said it was hardly improper to
finger China when public reports had referred to the "aggressive" spy
program run by the Chinese within Canada." The Toronto Star report indicated that a Chinese official seeking
asylum in Australia claimed that China has several thousand spies and agents in
Canada, mainly located in Vancouver and Toronto. Mr. Chen brought several documents to Canada this time, which he had taken
from the Chinese Consulate in Australia. These documents, including those
regarding the persecution of Falun Gong and democracy dissidents and monitoring
the Australian Tibetan Council, have not been publicly disclosed before. Posting date: 6/10/2007
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