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CYBER WARS
China, Indonesia pressure Australia over spy row
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Nov 01, 2013


China demands US explanation over spying row
Beijing (AFP) Nov 01, 2013 - China has demanded the United States provide an explanation over its spying programme amid reports that Washington's missions in the country were involved, with state media on Friday urging the withdrawal of American agents.

The Sydney Morning Herald newspaper, amplifying an earlier report by the German magazine Der Spiegel, said Tuesday that a top-secret map leaked by fugitive intelligence analyst Edward Snowden showed 90 US surveillance facilities at embassies and consulates worldwide.

The facilities in East Asia were focused on China, with centres in the US embassy in Beijing and US consulates in the commercial hub Shanghai and Chengdu, the capital of the southwestern province of Sichuan, it said.

Hua Chunying, spokeswoman for China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said Thursday that Beijing had "severe concerns" about the reports.

"We require the US to make a clarification and give an explanation," she told reporters at a regular briefing.

"We require friendly diplomatic missions and personnel in China to strictly abide by international treaties... and do not engage in any activity that... may jeopardise China's security and interests."

The defence ministry said that the revelation of the US eavesdropping programme has "sounded alarm bells" in China.

"We must continue to strengthen our information security work," ministry spokesman Yang Yujun told reporters at a briefing on Thursday.

The official China Daily on Friday urged Washington to recall its spies from the country, adding that their activities were "illegal in nature and not covered by diplomatic immunity".

"To many Americans, we are at the very best a potential rival, if not an enemy, despite all the official rhetoric about partnership," it said in an editorial.

"While the American intelligence system is given overwhelming authority to carry out surveillance operations at home under the US Patriot Act, this land is China," it said.

Australian embassies were being secretly used to intercept phone calls and data across Asia as part of the US-led global spying network, the Sydney Morning Herald said.

The US-led spying network has drawn fire from other Asian countries as the row spreads.

Indonesia on Friday summoned the Australian ambassador over what it called the "totally unacceptable" activities.

Jakarta has also protested strongly to the United States over reports Washington had been monitoring phone calls and communication networks from its embassy in the Indonesian capital.

The Asia-Pacific dispute comes as a major row rumbles between Washington and several European countries over the scale and scope of US surveillance of its allies, which has seen accusations that German Chancellor Angela Merkel's phone was monitored for more than a decade.

China and Indonesia demanded explanations from Australia Friday over reports that Canberra's missions were involved in a vast US-led surveillance network, as the row souring US-Europe relations spread in Asia.

US Secretary of State John Kerry admitted US spying had sometimes gone too far as a dispute erupted in the region following a story in the Sydney Morning Herald.

The newspaper reported a top-secret map leaked by fugitive intelligence analyst Edward Snowden showed 90 US surveillance facilities at diplomatic missions worldwide, amplifying an earlier story by German magazine Der Spiegel.

The centres in China included the US embassy in Beijing and US consulates in the commercial hub Shanghai and Chengdu, the capital of the southwestern province of Sichuan, the SMH said.

The SMH reports focused on secret US intelligence facilities in Asia and also said Australian diplomatic posts were being used to monitor phone calls and collect data as part of the American surveillance network.

"We require the Australian side to make a clarification," Hua Chunying, spokeswoman of China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told reporters at a regular briefing.

"We also urge the diplomatic missions and personnel in China to strictly abide by international treaties including the Vienna Convention," she said.

Her comments came a day after she said China required the United States to "make a clarification and give an explanation", adding foreign diplomatic missions and personnel must not engage in any activity that may "jeopardise China's security and interests".

Indonesia -- where the US and Australian embassies in Jakarta were both identified as surveillance facilities -- summoned Australian ambassador Greg Moriarty to the foreign ministry on Friday for a 20-minute meeting on the accusations.

Afterwards Moriarty told a scrum of reporters: "I just spoke to the secretary general, and from my perspective, it was a good meeting and now I have to go and report directly to my government."

Earlier this week Jakarta summoned the US ambassador over the issue.

Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa described the reported spying activities as "just not cricket".

Natalegawa, speaking Friday after talks with his Australian counterpart Julie Bishop in Perth, said his government was "obviously deeply concerned".

"Most of all, it's about trust," he said, adding: "I'm not sure what's the right term in Australian terminology, I guess it's not cricket to do this kind of thing."

Bishop said that Natalegawa had "raised his concerns, I took them on board and I take them seriously, but the Australian government does not and will not comment on intelligence matters".

The row is another blow to ties between Canberra and Jakarta, which have been tested by new Prime Minister Tony Abbott's hardline policies on trying to stop asylum seekers who board boats in Indonesia from arriving in Australia.

Widespread reports of US National Security Agency spying based on leaks from Snowden, including that the agency was monitoring German Chancellor Angela Merkel's phone, have already sparked a major trans-Atlantic rift.

In Malaysia, the foreign minister said it had "sought clarification" from the US ambassador to Malaysia, Joseph Yun, over the allegations.

The reaction from other Southeast Asian nations mentioned in the Sydney Morning Herald report was more muted, however, with Thailand, Cambodia and Myanmar seeking to downplay the issue.

Washington has been seeking to improve ties in Asia in recent years to counter growing Chinese dominance.

Kerry sought to calm the row by admitting that spying had sometimes gone too far and by offering assurances that such steps would not be repeated.

"I assure you, innocent people are not being abused in this process, but there's an effort to try to gather information," Kerry told a London conference via video link.

"And yes, in some cases, it has reached too far, inappropriately."

burs/slb/pdh

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