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The Guardian-UK slow to hold China to account for cyber-attacks against MPs and voters

March 25, 2024   4 min   668 words

这篇报道揭示了英国政府在对待中国网络攻击问题上的犹豫不决。尽管中国被指控对英国议员和选民进行网络攻击,但英国政府的反应却显得过于迟缓。这种态度反映出对中国的过度宽容,以至于忽视了其对英国国家安全构成的潜在威胁。很明显,英国政府需要强化其网络安全策略,对任何形式的网络攻击采取坚决行动,而不仅仅是对中国。此外,英国政府对中国在香港问题上的行为也需要表达更明确的立场。在维护国家安全和人权的问题上,英国不应对任何国家采取姑息态度。

2024-03-25T08:47:23Z
The flags of China and the UK next to each other.

The UK government has been too slow to respond to cyber-attacks by China, the head of an international group of parliamentarians focusing on the issue has said, ahead of expected new British sanctions against Beijing.

Oliver Dowden, the deputy prime minister, is expected to announce the sanctions in the Commons on Monday, after what the UK says have been cyber-attacks against MPs and peers, as well as one targeting the Electoral Commission in which Beijing allegedly accessed the personal details of about 40 million voters.

Three MPs and a peer who have faced apparent hacking attempts will separately hold a press conference after being briefed by the director of security for the UK parliament.

All four – the Conservative MPs Iain Duncan Smith and Tim Loughton, the SNP’s Stewart McDonald, and crossbench peer David Alton — are members of the the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China (Ipac), which groups together legislators from a number of countries, among them two dozen from the UK.

Luke de Pulford, the executive director of IPAC, said on Monday that he was surprised British ministers had taken so long to respond, especially given that the Electoral Commission hack was first detected in 2022.

With the cyber-attack taking place in 2021, and China only being linked to it now, “indicates that the government was a little bit reluctant to say that China had actually done this”, he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

“There seems to be a reluctance in general to hold China to account for its abuses,” he said, saying the UK had thus far imposed sanctions against some middle-level level officials in China over rights abuses in Xinjiang, but had failed to take similar action over Hong Kong, despite the UK’s historic role with the territory.

“The United States sanctioned over 40 members of the government in Hong Kong, and the UK, even though we are the ones with a legal responsibility, have sanctioned zero, not one,” he said.

There was a need for more help for MPs targeted by Beijing. “We need targeted sanctions on those responsible, but we also need support for members of parliament and those who are targeted by Beijing. This is pretty serious stuff.”

The junior energy minister Andrew Bowie refused to give any details about what actions Dowden might set out.

“You wouldn’t expect me to be able to go into more detail on issues of national security,” he told Sky News. “I’m sure we’ll be hearing more in the course of the day from the relevant ministers and the relevant departments.”

However he insisted the government would “stop at nothing” to protect Britons from cyberattacks

He told LBC radio: “The fact is that this government has invested a lot of time, money and effort in ensuring that our cybersecurity capabilities are at the place they need to be, we’ve increased the powers of our intelligence and security community to be able to deal with these threats.

“And we will stop at nothing to ensure that the British people, our democracy, our freedom of speech and our way of life is defended.”

He insisted the government took a pragmatic approach to dealing with Beijing, amid reports that China’s EVE Energy is set to invest in a battery plant in the West Midlands.

“We have to have a grown-up, pragmatic relationship with China. And that means looking at each of these investments in the round, on a case-by-case basis, ensuring that our security and our individual liberties and freedoms are not undermined by any of the investments that are that are underway.”

MPs and peers are thought to be among 43 people who the government looks set to confirm have been targeted by cyber-attacks backed by the Chinese state.

The UK could impose sanctions on individuals believed to be involved in these acts of state-backed interference, including the attack on the Electoral Commission.



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