China denies economic espionage charges

China's Foreign Ministry has called on Washington to withdraw accusations that China engaged in economic espionage, labelling such claims "slanderous".

Deputy US Attorney-General Rod Rosenstein

The US government's Rod Rosenstein says nine out of 10 economic espionage cases involve China. (AAP)

China's Foreign Ministry says it resolutely opposes "slanderous" accusations from the United States and other allies criticising China for economic espionage, urging Washington to withdraw its accusations.

The United States should also withdraw charges against two Chinese citizens, the ministry said, adding that China had never participated in or supported any stealing of commercial secrets and had lodged "stern representations" with Washington.

"We urge the US side to immediately correct its erroneous actions and cease its slanderous smears relating to internet security," it said, adding that it would take necessary measures to safeguard its own cybersecurity and interests.

It has long been an "open secret" that US government agencies have hacked into and listening in on foreign governments, companies and individuals, the ministry added.

"The US side making unwarranted criticisms of China in the name of so-called 'cyber stealing' is blaming others while oneself is to be blamed, and is self-deception. China absolutely cannot accept this."

US prosecutors indicted two Chinese nationals linked to China's Ministry of State Security intelligence agency on charges of stealing confidential data from American government agencies and businesses around the world.

Prosecutors charged Zhu Hua and Zhang Shilong in hacking attacks against the US Navy, the space agency NASA and the Energy Department and dozens of companies. The operation targeted intellectual property and corporate secrets to give Chinese companies an unfair competitive advantage, they said.

The pair were members of a hacking group known within the cyber security community as APT 10 and also worked for a Tianjin company Huaying Haitai Science and Technology Development Co, prosecutors said.

More than 90 per cent of Justice Department economic espionage cases in the past seven years involve China, Deputy Attorney-General Rod Rosenstein said on Thursday.

Britain, Australia and New Zealand joined the US in slamming China over what they called a global campaign of cyber-enabled commercial intellectual property theft, signalling growing global coordination against the practice.

China's Foreign Ministry said Britain and other countries had also made "slanderous comments" stemming from "ulterior motives".

Five sources familiar with the attacks told Reuters the hackers breached the networks of Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co and IBM, then used the access to hack into their clients' computers. IBM said it had no evidence that sensitive data had been compromised.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told reporters she noted IBM's statement that it had no evidence sensitive data had been compromised.

Certain people in the United States have taken to regular slandering of China, Hua told reporters.

"Perhaps they think that if they repeat a lie 1000 times it becomes the truth. But I want to tell them that it's still a lie even if repeated 10,000 times."


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Source: AAP



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China denies economic espionage charges | SBS News