Connecting the Dots

Uncovering: China’s Long Arm in the UK

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China’s Long Arm in the UK

A parliamentary report reveals a growing threat to safety and sovereignty

Source:  Internal Consortium of Investigative Journalists:

The Big Picture: A U.K. parliamentary committee has named China a “flagrant perpetrator” of transnational repression — using intimidation, surveillance, and state influence to target dissidents on British soil.

“The UK should be a place of sanctuary… but repression is going unchecked.”
Lord David Alton, Chair, U.K. Joint Committee on Human Rights

What’s happening

A new report by the U.K. Joint Committee on Human Rights says China is leading an alarming trend of authoritarian regimes extending their reach beyond borders — with Russia and Iran also named.

China’s tactics include:

  • ️ Surveillance and harassment of exiled critics
  • Online influence campaigns targeting Hong Kong exiles
  • Abuse of Interpol’s Red Notice system
  • Pressure through Chinese NGOs tied to the Communist Party

Real-world impact

On individuals:
Dissidents and exiles, including Hong Kong pro-democracy activists, report constant fear, threats, and even bounties on their heads.

“It’s long-overdue recognition of the insidious threat we face.”
Simon Cheng, Hong Kong activist with a $130K bounty

On democracy:
Transnational repression undermines free expression, human rights, and community safety in the U.K. and beyond.

Key findings in the report

  • China uses a broad range of tactics to harass critics abroad
  • Victims include ethnic, religious, and political minorities
  • Interpol tools are exploited for political targeting
  • The U.K. lacks a cohesive strategy to stop it

What’s recommended

The committee urged the U.K. government to:

  • ✅ Define “transnational repression” officially
  • Launch a victim support hotline
  • Train law enforcement to recognize and respond
  • Require foreign agents to register under the Foreign Influence Registration Scheme
  • Pressure Interpol to stop abuse of Red Notices

A global problem, a local battleground

“China’s targeting doesn’t stop at borders. It shows up in courtrooms, community centers, and UN sessions.”
ICIJ “China Targets” investigation

As authoritarian regimes grow bolder, Western democracies must reckon with foreign interference — and protect those who sought refuge.

What’s next

“The government must follow through — not selectively, but comprehensively — to protect rights, democracy, and safety.”
Simon Cheng

Bottom line:

The U.K. is now a front line in a global fight against authoritarian overreach.

Sanctuary must mean safety.
Democracy must mean protection.

“Transnational repression is not just foreign policy — it’s personal.”

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