- By Sam Francis & Jennifer McKiernan
- Political reporters, BBC News
The UK government has formally accused China of being behind what it called “malicious” cyber campaigns against MPs and the Electoral Commission.
Two people and a company have been sanctioned over cyber-attacks.
Deputy PM Oliver Dowden said they were behind attempts to access details of MPs and peers critical of Beijing.
The two Chinese nationals are Zhao Guangzong and Ni Gaobin and the company is Wuhan Xiaoruizhi Science and Technology Company Ltd, who they say work for the China state-affiliated cyber espionage group Advanced Persistent Threat Group 31 (APT31).
The UK sanctions will freeze assets, barring UK citizens and businesses from handling their funds or resources. A travel ban will also prevent them from entering or remaining in the UK.
“The UK will not tolerate malicious cyber activity,” Mr Dowden said.
“It is an absolute priority for the UK government to protect our democratic system and values.”
The Chinese ambassador is being called in to be held “to account for China’s conduct in these incidents”, Mr Dowden said.
The cyber attack on the Electoral Commission between August 2021 and October 2022 was one of the most significant in British history.
Not only were databases containing names and addresses of 40 million people accessed, but also sensitive emails from its “control systems” and between election officials over six by-elections.
‘Watershed moment’
Former Conservative leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith, former minister Tim Loughton and the SNP’s Stewart McDonald all faced harassment, failed hacks and impersonations by groups seeking to influence foreign dignitaries.
They are calling for the UK to go further and send a clear message, designating China “a threat”.
The US has done just that, announcing that the same two Chinese nationals are among a group of seven facing criminal charges of conspiracy to commit computer intrusions and conspiracy to commit wire fraud in New York.
A statement from the US Attorney’s Office states that they were involved in “malicious cyber operations aimed at threatening the national security of the United States and our allies” with a hacking group that spent roughly 14 years targeting critics of Beijing in the United States and elsewhere.
Sir Iain called for more sanctions against Chinese government actors, but called the announcement “a watershed moment where the UK takes a stand for human rights and an international rules-based system”.
He said a combative proponent of the Chinese government, known as a “wolf warrior”, had been sending emails impersonating him and falsely suggesting he altered his views on Beijing.
China should be placed in the “enhanced tier” of the new foreign influence registration scheme, which would increase scrutiny on Chinese government-backed operations in the UK.
Sir Iain said: “The West has to wake up to the fact this is a challenge to the very way that we live our lives.
“To our belief in democracy, human rights, freedom of expression, freedom of worship.
“These are the things that we hold dear, but we seem reluctant to want to defend those against the others who hold none of those virtues and values and want to take ours from us.”
Sir Iain and Mr Loughton were among among nine UK citizens sanctioned by China over exposing human rights abuses against the Uighur Muslim minority group.
Mr Loughton warned China is “in the business of trying to influence elections and democracies as well”.
Labour said it would support the government to counter state actors trying to “interfere with or undermine the electoral process”.
Mr Dowden credited the Defending Democracy taskforce, a committee that tracks election threats, with pinpointing China-affiliated organisations and individuals behind cyber operations.
Sanctioning groups linked to China, a fellow member of the UN Security Council, is an escalation in the diplomatic tension between the two countries.
The prime minister then was David Cameron, who is now the foreign secretary.
On Monday, Lord Cameron briefed about 40 Conservative MPs and peers at a meeting of the backbench 1922 Committee for about an hour, giving what one described as a “tour of the world”.
Several MPs suggested the UK’s decision to vote for the UN Security Council Resolution on Gaza was discussed to a greater extent than relations with China, at the last session before the Easter recess.
Outside the meeting, one MP told journalists Lord Cameron suggested that the “situation has changed” since he pursued a policy of greater engagement with China as prime minister.
However, Labour said Lord Cameron’s role as vice president of a UK-China investment fund should also be investigated in case he had been chosen “to lend credibility to Chinese investment, as well as to the broader China brand”.
UK government concern over Chinese espionage and parliamentary interference has been rising.
Acknowledging the attacks last August, the Electoral Commission said “hostile actors” had gained access to copies of the electoral registers and broken into its emails and “control systems”, but added that it had neither had any impact on any elections nor anyone’s registration status.
The Electoral Commission has since taken steps to secure its systems against future activity.
China has consistently denied accusations of espionage and wrong-doing.
China’s foreign ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said the government cracked down and punished all types of malicious cyber activities.
He called on all parties to “stop spreading false information and take a responsible attitude to jointly maintain peace and security in cyberspace”.
The government stresses it has rejected or wound down Chinese investment in infrastructure in recent years on national security grounds.