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  • โœ‡Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • 10 Taiwanese charged with spying for China AFP
    Ten Taiwanese people, including former and active military personnel, were indicted Tuesday for allegedly spying for Beijing, Taiwanese prosecutors said. Taiwan flags. Photo: Taiwan Office of the President, via Flickr. China claims self-ruled Taiwan as its territory and has ramped up military and political pressure on the island in recent years. The two sides have been spying on each other for decades, but analysts say the threat to Taiwan is greater given that China has threatened to
     

10 Taiwanese charged with spying for China

By: AFP
14 April 2026 at 09:20
Taiwan flags helicopters featured image

Ten Taiwanese people, including former and active military personnel, were indicted Tuesday for allegedly spying for Beijing, Taiwanese prosecutors said.

Taiwan National Day military helicopter flag
Taiwan flags. Photo: Taiwan Office of the President, via Flickr.

China claims self-ruled Taiwan as its territory and has ramped up military and political pressure on the island in recent years.

The two sides have been spying on each other for decades, but analysts say the threat to Taiwan is greater given that China has threatened to use force to bring Taipei under its control.

Nine of the defendants โ€” former and active military personnel โ€” were accused of โ€œfilming videos pledging allegiance to the CCPโ€ (Chinaโ€™s Communist Party) and โ€œcollecting and handing over classified military informationโ€ in exchange for money, the Ciaotou District Prosecutors Office said in a statement.

They were all serving in the army, navy, air force and coast guard when a โ€œhostile foreign groupโ€ โ€” described to AFP as affiliated with the CCP โ€” approached them on social media and allegedly bribed them.

Prosecutors said the bribes โ€” paid in bank transfers and cryptocurrency โ€” ranged between NT$72,000 (US$2,000) and NT$1.7 million (US$53,500).

See also: Taiwanโ€™s existential battle against Chinese spies

One civilian defendant was accused of offering the โ€œhostile foreign groupโ€ use of his bank account to bribe army personnel in return for monthly payments.

It will be Taiwanโ€™s first national security case to be tried by citizen judges, following a law passed three years ago to bring the public into judicial decision-making.

By providing classified information to โ€œhostile foreign forcesโ€, the former and current military personnel โ€œseriously jeopardised national security,โ€ prosecutors said.

Prosecutors are seeking heavier-than-usual sentences as a โ€œwarning and deterrentโ€ in the face of โ€œincreasingly seriousโ€ infiltration by foreign forces.

Espionage convictions in Taiwan can lead to sentences of 10 years or more.

The number of people prosecuted for spying for Beijing has risen sharply in recent years, with retired and serving members of Taiwanโ€™s military the main targets of Chinese infiltration efforts, official figures show.

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