Accessibility links

Breaking News

New Zealand spy report calls out China for interference 


FILE - Supporters gather on a road during a visit by China's Premier Li Qiang to the New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research at Mt Albert in Auckland on June 14, 2024.
FILE - Supporters gather on a road during a visit by China's Premier Li Qiang to the New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research at Mt Albert in Auckland on June 14, 2024.

New Zealand's spy service branded China a "complex intelligence concern" Tuesday and warned the Pacific nation was vulnerable to foreign interference.

In an annual threat report, the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service said several countries were undertaking "malicious activity" on its shores and called out China's attempts as "complex and deceptive."

In particular, Beijing was accused of using front organizations to connect with local groups to replace authentic and diverse community views with those approved by the ruling party.

In one example, a Chinese-language community news outlet parroted Beijing's talking points, it said.

"These front organizations will often appear to be community-based... but their true affiliation, direction and funding sources are hidden," the report said.

The unusually blunt language comes as New Zealand's recently elected center-right government tilts the country's foreign policy more closely toward traditional Western allies.

This comes after years of growing economic ties with China — New Zealand's biggest trade partner.

In March, Wellington publicly said a Chinese state-sponsored group was behind a 2021 malicious cyber-attack that infiltrated sensitive government computer systems.

China dismissed allegations of hacking and accused New Zealand critics of being puppets of Washington.

'Manage them'

New Zealand's spy agency said the country's geographical position and role in the Pacific region made it "vulnerable" to other countries striving for greater influence.

That included Russia, which "likely monitors the public statements and social media accounts" of people.

In another case, an unnamed country contacted a local New Zealand council and offered to pay for a community event if they agreed to restrict a particular religious group.

Andrew Hampton, Director-General of Security, said the report aimed to be upfront about threats facing the country.

"The point is not to alarm anyone but to alert New Zealanders to the threats so that we can work together to manage them," he said.

Earlier this year, New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said the country could no longer depend on the "splendid isolation" provided by its geography.

China remains New Zealand's biggest trading partner — exporting diary, meat and wood products that exceeded US$13.2 billion, according to the most recent official data.

Luxon has warned that although China was "a country of undoubted influence," different values mean "there are issues on which we cannot and will not agree."

XS
SM
MD
LG