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China warns of β€˜spy turtles’ fishing for sea secrets

Sea turtle featured image

Foreign spies are fitting turtles and fish with sensors to create underwater maps of China’s coastline, Beijing warned Friday in apparent reference to its Western competitors.

A sea turtle swimming underwater.
A sea turtle swimming underwater. File photo: OhCan, via Pexels.

In a social media post ominously titled β€œUnder the deep blue, undercurrents are surging”, the Ministry of State Security said international spy agencies are using β€œnew types of espionage equipment” to steal sensitive marine data.

β€œRelatively large marine animals with sensors attached have been discovered in certain waters of China,” the ministry said, in a section titled β€œspy turtles, spy fish”.

The clandestine creatures were found β€œswimming in a specific area, collecting sensitive data about the marine environment such as water temperature, salinity and ocean current, transmitting it overseas via satellite”, it said.

Foreign groups also used solar-powered wave gliders, buoys with high-precision sensors, and devices loaded onto cargo ships capable of capturing β€œport dynamics” in real time, it added, without naming a particular agency.

The data collected would be used to create β€œunderwater maps” that can β€œidentify weak points in China’s coastal defences, posing a serious threat to China’s national security”, according to the ministry.

The ministry urged proper security checks on equipment received from abroad, and called on fishers to report any fishy-looking buoys or devices found at sea.

Beijing and Western governments have long traded accusations of espionage.

Last year Beijing warned government workers to remain vigilant of β€œhoneytrap” schemes, after a public servant was lured by the β€œseductive beauty” of a foreign agent.

This month, the Five Eyes alliance of Western security agencies said Chinese spies were posing as job recruiters online to seek sensitive information.

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