President Xi Jinping has overseen a sweeping revamp of the security apparatus, aimed at combating threats both at home and abroad |
A Chinese man has been
sentenced to death for leaking more than 150,000 classified documents to an
unidentified foreign power, state television said on Tuesday, offering unusual
details of a kind of case rarely mentioned in public.
Reuters
report continues:
The
man, a computer technician from Sichuan named as Huang Yu, worked for a
government department which handled state secrets, but he was a bad employee
and was sacked, the report said.
Filled
with anger, he messaged a "foreign spy organization" on the internet
and offered to sell documents he had obtained while working for his former
employer, who gladly took him up on his offer and so began their relationship,
it added.
Meeting
in Southeast Asia and Hong Kong, Huang eventually handed over 150,000
documents, covering secrets ranging from everything from the ruling Communist
Party to military and financial issues, the report said.
But
as he was no longer employed, he began to run out of documents to provide, and
so targeted his wife and brother-in-law who also worked for government
departments handling state secrets, state television said.
In
the end, his frequent travel and sudden unexplained wealth caught up with him
and in 2011 he was arrested, and then sentenced to death, it added.
The
report did not say when or if the execution had happened, or where he was
tried.
China's
state secrets law is notoriously broad, covering everything from industry data
to the exact birth dates of state leaders. Information can also be labelled a
state secret retroactively.
President
Xi Jinping has overseen a sweeping revamp of the security apparatus, aimed at
combating threats both at home and abroad.
But
new security laws he has passed, or wants to pass, have alarmed Western
governments, including the counterterrorism law and a draft cyber security law,
amidst a renewed crackdown on dissent.
The
cyber security and counterterrorism laws codify sweeping powers for the
government to combat perceived threats, from widespread censorship to
heightened control over certain technologies.
Critics
of the counterterrorism legislation, for one, say it could be interpreted in
such a way that even non-violent dissidents could fall within its definition of
terrorism.
China has consistently rejected any criticism of its human rights record, saying it adheres to the rule of law.
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