Singapore boy admits to being a Chinese spy in the U.S.

Jun Wei Yeo has been accused of his political consulting firm in the United States to collect data for Chinese intelligence, U.S. officials said.

Moreover, the United States had arrested a Chinese investigator accused of concealing her ties to the Chinese military.

China previously ordered the closure of the U.S. consulate in Chengdu.

The resolution to close the diplomatic project in the southwest town in reaction to the closure of the Chinese consulate in Houston via the United States.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the resolution was made because China “steals” intellectual property.

China’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin responded by saying the US resolution was based on “a mix of anti-Chinese lies.”

After a 72-hour delay for Chinese diplomats to leave the houston consulate, which expired Friday at 16:00 (21:00 GMT), hounds saw men giving the impression of being U.S. officials forcing a doorway to enter the premises. . A uniformed workers’ corps of the U.S. State Department’s Office of Diplomatic Security took a position to monitor the entrance.

Tensions have increased between the two nuclear powers on key issues.

President Donald Trump’s administration has clashed in Beijing over industry and the coronavirus pandemic, as well as china’s imposition of a new debatable security law in Hong Kong.

Jun Wei Yeo, also known as Dickson Yeo, pleaded guilty Friday in federal court to run for illegal Chinese agent in 2015-19, the U.S. Department of Justice said in a statement.

In the past he had been accused of his political recommendation in the country as a front for collecting valuable and private data for Chinese intelligence.

In his guilty plea, he admitted to spotting Americans with high-level security permissions and having written reports for fake clients. According to court documents, he was recruited through Chinese intelligence in 2015 after making a presentation in Beijing.

At the time, he was a PhD student at a prestigious university in Singapore.

According to the guilty plea, Yeo used an online professional network page, believed to be LinkedIn, to touch on potential targets that might have sensitive information.

Yeo arrested while on his way to the United States in 2019.

The researcher appointed through U.S. officials such as Juan Tang, 37.

She is one of four Chinese citizens accused this week of visa fraud for alleged mendacity over her service in the Chinese People’s Liberation Army.

Juan Tang the last of the four detainees in California, after the United States accused the Chinese consulate in San Francisco of harboring him.

It wasn’t without delay to know how he arrested her.

FBI agents uncovered photographs of Juan Tang dressed in an army uniform and tested articles in China that identified his military affiliation, the Associated Press reports.

He quotes from the University of California, Davis, saying that she resigned her task as a visiting researcher in the Department of Radiation Oncology in June.

There are several points at stake. U.S. officials have blamed China for the global spread of Covid-19. Specifically, President Donald Trump alleged, presenting any evidence, that the virus came from a Chinese lab in Wuhan.

And in unsevered comments, a spokesman for China’s Foreign Ministry said in March that the U.S. military could have brought the virus to Wuhan.

The United States and China have been engaged in tariff warfare since 2018.

Trump has long accused China of unfair industrial practices and theft of intellectual property, but in Beijing there is a sense that the United States is seeking to curb its status as a global economic power.

The United States has also imposed sanctions on Chinese politicians who say they are guilty of human rights violations that oppose Muslim minorities in Xinjiang. China is accused of mass detention, persecution and forced sterilization of Uighurs and others.

Beijing denies the allegations and has accused the United States of “blatant interference” in its affairs.

China’s imposition of a radical security law is also a source of tension with the United States and the United Kingdom, which administered the territory until 1997.

In response, the United States reversed the prestige of Hong Kong’s special industry last week, avoiding chinese product price lists imposed across the United States.

The United States and the United Kingdom see the Security Act as a risk to Hong Kong’s freedoms under a 1984 agreement between China and the United Kingdom, before sovereignty returned to Beijing.

The UK has infuriated China by describing a path to British citizenship for nearly 3 million Hong Kong residents.

China responded by threatening to avoid recognition of a type of British passport, BNO, held through a large number of people living in Hong Kong.

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