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TAIWAN NEWS
Two Taiwanese jailed for spying for China
by Staff Writers
Taipei (AFP) July 18, 2012



Two Taiwanese businesspeople based on the Chinese mainland were convicted and sentenced Wednesday after they were found guilty on charges of spying for the island's former rival China, a court said.

In an espionage case that has shocked military gurus, businesswoman Chou Yi-ru was sentenced to four years while businessman Chiang Fu-ming three years on charges of treason, the High Court in central Taiwan said in a statement.

Both of them, arrested in February, are allowed to appeal, it said.

The investigation into the case found that Chou joined the Chinese espionage service six years ago and recruited Chiang and also his nephew, a Taiwanese air force captain at a radar command and control centre, a year later.

The captain, also arrested in February on charges of leaking classified data to China, has been investigated separately by a military court.

The arrest of the captain has alarmed the authorities, given the sensitive position he had held.

Taiwan's defence ministry had declined to provide details of the espionage, but the widely-circulated Next Magazine had said the Chinese military has long sought access to the centre which houses highly sensitive information including details on the air force's "Strong Net" radar system.

The centre in the north is responsible for surveillance of the skies stretching from the island's north to southeastern Chinese coastal provinces like Fujian, Zhejiang and Jiangxi, according to the magazine.

The leaked data may allow China to obtain information regarding the US-made Patriot surface-to-air missiles that Taiwan has deployed, it said.

Chen Chen-hsiang, a former general who is now a legislator in the ruling Kuomintang party, had said he was "shocked" at the news as the unit was supposed to be highly confidential.

Ties between Taipei and Beijing have improved markedly since Ma Ying-jeou of the China-friendly Kuomintang party came to power in 2008 on a platform of beefing up trade and tourism links.

But the episode has highlighted Beijing's lingering hostilities towards the island, which it still regards as part of its territory awaiting to be reunified -- by force if necessary.

In July last year, a Taiwanese general lured by a honey trap into spying for China was sentenced to life in prison by a military high court, in one of the island's worst spying cases for half a century.

The island has governed itself for more than six decades since splitting from the mainland in 1949 at the end of a civil war.

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US help sought on Taiwanese detained in China
Washington (AFP) July 18, 2012 - A daughter of a Taiwanese man who was arrested in China appealed Wednesday for support in the United States, saying that she feared he would suffer abuse due to his religious beliefs.

Chung Ting-pang, a technology company manager who adheres to the spiritual movement Falungong, was visiting the mainland and not seen again after he checked in for his return flight on June 18 in the southern city of Ganzhou.

China's state-run Xinhua news agency said authorities suspected that Chung obtained classified documents, brought in broadcasting equipment and worked to sabotage television services on the mainland.

But his daughter Alice Chung said that her father was visiting relatives and feared that he would be mistreated due to his belief in Falungong. She met this week with US lawmakers to seek their assistance in seeking his release.

China banned Falungong in 1999 and strictly prohibits its activities, but advocates said that the incident marked a rare case in which Beijing has targeted a non-citizen. China claims Taiwan as part of its territory.

"We are a small island and have less power compared with China. But I think that if US citizens went to China, they wouldn't dare to capture them," Chung told AFP in Washington.

In a written appeal issued in Washington, Chung said that she was not herself an adherent of Falungong but believed that China, at a time that it is growing into a greater power, should respect freedom of religion.

"With a territory as large as China's, it is unbelievable that the regime can't tolerate a slice of freedom of thought and can't endow people with basic human rights," she wrote.

Representative Dana Rohrabacher, a Republican and strident critic of China, wrote a letter to Taiwan's President Ma Ying-Jeou and urged him to "speak out strongly" on Chung's case.

Rohrabacher said that the Beijing-friendly Ma has been too quiet on the case, writing him: "Taiwan should not stand idle while its citizens are held captive."



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TAIWAN NEWS
Taiwan intelligence officer put on wanted list
Taipei (AFP) July 17, 2012
Taiwan has put a military intelligence officer on the wanted list after she failed to report to work following a holiday in Thailand last month, the defence ministry said Tuesday. The lieutenant, identified only by her surname Yeh, has been sacked by the military intelligence bureau and will face court martial for abandoning her post if she returns to Taiwan, according to the ministry. H ... read more


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