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CYBER WARS
Snowden extradition would be a 'betrayal': China media
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) June 17, 2013


China army newspaper hits out at US's PRISM programme
Beijing (AFP) June 16, 2013 - China's official army newspaper Sunday branded the United States Internet surveillance programme exposed by former spy Edward Snowden as "frightening", and accused the US of being a "habitual offender" when it comes to network monitoring.

The People's Liberation Army (PLA) Daily hit out at the US for implying that spying on citizens from other countries was justified, and said that the PRISM monitoring programme had probably been used to collect large amounts of data unrelated to anti-terrorism operations.

The remarks about the programme are among the most scathing to appear in China's state-run press following Beijing's refusal to make an official comment.

"US intelligence agencies are 'habitual offenders' with regards to network monitoring and espionage," the article, attributed to the PLA's Foreign Languages Institute, said.

"There is reason to believe US intelligence agencies, while collecting anti-terrorism information online have also 'incidentally' collected a lot of information in other fields."

Under the so-called PRISM programme, the US National Security Agency can issue directives to Internet firms like Google or Facebook to gain access to emails, online chats, pictures, files and videos that have been uploaded by foreign users.

"US President Obama has said that PRISM is not directed at US citizens," the article said.

"The implication is that for the purposes of US security, monitoring citizens of other countries is not a problem. This simple, overbearing logic is the frightening aspect of the PRISM programme.

"The US government says that PRISM is concerned with anti-terrorism, and does not involve any other matters. But anyone with intelligence expertise can tell this is admitting ones guilt by protesting innocence."

The PLA Foreign Languages institute is China's top military language training facility, and is thought to be a key training-ground for Chinese intelligence officers.

The article also accused the US of spying on its own citizens, saying that it had "clearly... not been established" that US intelligence agencies had only used the programme to monitor foreign nationals.

China has stayed tight lipped following the revelations from the former US government subcontractor, which included claims of US hacking directed at China and which came amid tensions between Washington and Beijing about online espionage.

On Thursday China's foreign ministry gave little insight into Beijing's thinking.

"I have no information to offer," ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a regular briefing.

Snowden, who is in hiding in Hong Kong, has vowed to fight any attempt by the US to extradite him from the semi-autonomous Chinese territory.

The issue of cyber-security has emerged as major point of contention between the US and China, with US President Obama discussing the issue with China's top leader Xi Jinping at a summit earlier this month.

China and its military have denied that it engages in hacking attacks on foreign countries, despite multiple reports of extensive hacking operations carried out by PLA operatives against foreign targets.

China for years carried out extensive monitoring of its own citizens Internet use, and has previously imprisoned several political dissidents based on emails obtained from US-based service provider Yahoo!.

The China Daily Thursday cited an analyst who noted the irony that the US's surveillance programme was exposed just as it began ramping up pressure on Beijing.

"It turns out that the biggest threat to the pursuit of individual freedom and privacy in the US is the unbridled power of the government," the paper quoted China Foreign Affairs University researcher Li Haidong as saying.

A state-backed Chinese newspaper Monday said extraditing former spy Edward Snowden to the United States would be a "betrayal" of his trust and a "face-losing outcome" for Beijing.

The comments are among the strongest to be put forward by domestic media against extraditing Snowden, a former National Security Agency subcontractor who is hiding in Hong Kong.

The US has launched a criminal investigation into Snowden after he exposed a massive Internet surveillance operation -- including claims of hacking directed at China -- amid tensions between Washington and Beijing over online espionage.

Beijing has been tightlipped on Snowden, with the foreign ministry saying last week it had "no information to offer". But Chinese media have previously said Beijing should be governed by public opinion in refusing to send him back.

Monday's Global Times editorial went into detail about the "face-losing outcome" for China if he was returned.

"Unlike a common criminal, Snowden did not hurt anybody. His 'crime' was that he blew the whistle on the US government's violation of civil rights," it said.

"Extraditing Snowden back to the US would not only be a betrayal of Snowden's trust, but a disappointment for expectations around the world.

"The image of Hong Kong would be forever tarnished."

The editorial also said that "Snowden believes in the democracy and freedom of Hong Kong," adding: "China's growing power is attracting people to seek asylum in China".

China's official army newspaper Sunday branded the surveillance programme exposed by Snowden as "frightening".

The former spy has vowed to fight any attempt by the US to extradite him from Hong Kong, which retained a separate legal system when it returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

Half of Hong Kongers surveyed believe the city's government should not extradite Snowden, according to a poll published on Sunday.

The poll in the Sunday Morning Post found 49.9 percent of respondents thought Snowden should not be sent back if Washington files for extradition.

The survey found that only 17.6 percent of 509 respondents favoured the move, while 32.4 percent were undecided.

The survey was published a day after hundreds of people turned out in the territory on Saturday in the first major demonstration in support of Snowden.

Snowden poses stress test for H.K.'s ties with China
Hong Kong (AFP) June 17, 2013 - Former spy Edward Snowden has exposed not only US cyber-espionage but also political fault lines in Hong Kong that are deepening as the territory, a proud bastion of free speech and protest, chafes under Chinese rule.

In retreating to Hong Kong and vowing to fight any extradition attempt, the former CIA analyst is testing its civil liberties and will set a landmark on whether the city can govern itself without interference from Beijing, experts say.

"I'd be concerned if China oversteps its power because every time it does, it opens up more opportunities for it to do so in the future," said Billy Leung, one of several hundred people who attended a rain-drenched rally in defence of the self-styled whistleblower on Saturday.

"I think it would be very important for Hong Kong to be able to safeguard their right to decide on the terms of his extradition if there is such a request being put to us," the 28-year-old translator told AFP.

Hong Kong's government is vowing to let the law take its course in its handling of Snowden, who arrived in the city in late May with a trove of documents on US cyber-spying that he has leaked to the press.

While the US government has yet to file any formal extradition request, a weekend newspaper poll found that half of Hong Kongers objected to sending him back.

Hong Kong, which retained a separate legal system after returning to China in 1997, has an extradition treaty with the United States but Beijing has the potential to veto any ruling, and suspicion is rife that it will step in.

The suspicion is stoked by longstanding concerns that China does not want to allow greater democracy in Hong Kong and, in its responses to constitutional appeals by the city's own leadership, has ridden roughshod over public opinion.

"That fear of Beijing interference is always prevalent in Hong Kong on every front," pro-democracy lawmaker Claudia Mo told AFP.

"Most people would tend to suspect that there would be some form of Beijing intervention, not overtly of course," she said.

Some Chinese state media say Beijing should in fact be governed by public opinion in the Snowden case. The Global Times said Monday that extraditing him would be a "betrayal" of his trust and a "face-losing outcome" for China and Hong Kong.

"Extraditing Snowden back to the US would not only be a betrayal of Snowden's trust, but a disappointment for expectations around the world," it said. "The image of Hong Kong would be forever tarnished."

Snowden timed his trip to Hong Kong well. In two weeks, pro-democracy groups will stage their annual July 1 march marking the anniversary of the Chinese takeover. Last year, organisers claimed an enormous turnout of 400,000 people as anti-Beijing sentiment surged.

Beyond the perennial debate about Hong Kong's political system, ordinary citizens have vented anti-China anger on an array of issues ranging from high property prices to rude mainland tourists and shortages of baby milk powder.

"My intention is to ask the courts and the people of Hong Kong to decide my fate. I have been given no reason to doubt your system," Snowden told the South China Morning Post last Wednesday, in his first interview since unmasking himself to the Guardian newspaper on June 10.

In the SCMP interview, Snowden described hacking by the US National Security Agency of router networks in the city and the Chinese mainland. Some observers believe Beijing has a strong interest in grilling him further about what he knows.

But many analysts say the US-China relationship is too important to be sacrificed over the 29-year-old contractor and anticipate a quiet deal to hand him over, regardless of whether Hong Kong courts rule to let him stay.

"This is going to affect the Sino-US relationship, so Beijing will step in and ultimately, it will have a big say in terms of how this is going to be solved," said Ma Ngok, a professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong's Department of Government and Public Administration.

But Snowden is appealing to popular opinion as much as to the courts -- and that has proved a potent force in Hong Kong even if the city still lacks universal suffrage.

Last September, the government was forced to back down on a plan to make Chinese patriotism classes mandatory in schools, after tens of thousands took to the streets in protest ahead of legislative polls.

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CYBER WARS
China army newspaper hits out at US's PRISM program
Beijing (AFP) June 16, 2013
China's official army newspaper Sunday branded the United States Internet surveillance programme exposed by former spy Edward Snowden as "frightening", and accused the US of being a "habitual offender" when it comes to network monitoring. The People's Liberation Army (PLA) Daily hit out at the US for implying that spying on citizens from other countries was justified, and said that the PRISM ... read more


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