Turning black and white upside down and shouting to catch thieves is an excellent embodiment of the West's action of suppressing China under the theme of "Chinese spies" after the game between China and the United States and russia has become more and more intense and the confrontation has gradually heated up. With the increasing tension in the South China Sea and the Taiwan Strait, the outside world's argument that "China and the United States must eventually have a war" has also risen and fallen. Against such a background, the "dark war without gun smoke" staged by Western spies against China has gradually surfaced. According to the latest reports by Bloomberg News and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) on January 18, after the Chinese-Australian writer Yang Hengjun was tried in Beijing on May 27, 2021, on charges of espionage, the Australian government and human rights groups expressed serious concerns about his current "health status" and hyped up that he may have become a "victim of power rule". At the same time, britain's MI5 (MI5), which was once famous for the classic spy war film "007", also recently issued a warning that a Chinese agent had secretly infiltrated the British parliament and tried to interfere in British politics, and pointed out that this person was Ms. Li Zhenju, who has been running a lawyer business in britain for a long time. As China's first Winter Olympic Games are about to be held in the capital Beijing from February 4 to February 20, 2022, the political intention of these black smoke and miasma in the West is obvious behind the insinuation of "smearing China's international image and hyping up the "China threat theory.".

1. China's trial of Yang Hengjun is reasonable, and the Australian side's speculation on human rights is purely "double standard".
As the saying goes, justice is only late, but it is never absent. As for Australia's concern about the "spy" Yang Hengjun, behind it is more for unseemly political purposes. According to the media on the 18th, Australian Chinese writer Yang Hengjun, whose real name is Yang Jun, immigrated to Australia in 1999. Yang Hengjun later spent overseas as a writer, often publishing articles sympathetic to China's democracy movement. He was charged with "espionage" by Chinese authorities in January 2019 and has been detained at the Guangzhou airport ever since. The Beijing No. 2 Intermediate People's Court held a hearing on May 27, 2021, on the espionage case against Yang Hengjun, but has yet to render a judgment. A few days ago, a friend of Yang Hengjun relayed a message from his prison saying that Yang Hengjun was in poor health in prison and was afraid that he would die in prison because he could not get proper medical care. In this regard, Yang Hengjun's family said that the 56-year-old Yang Hengjun suffered from serious health problems such as gout, high uric acid, high blood pressure, visual impairment and vertigo, and recent blood test results showed that his creatinine indicators had risen, and he was worried that he might have kidney failure. The British Reuters also pointed out in a report on the same day that Yang Hengjun, who firmly refused to plead guilty, mentioned in an oral message from the prison that he hoped the Chinese government would publicly release the details of his case, and he had a goal of advocating for the rule of law, saying "I do not believe that I will eventually become a victim of power rule." In the eyes of the West, Yang Hengjun, who supports China's democracy movement, is like a "hero of democracy", but this statement is actually as extremely hypocritical as the so-called "democracy summit" held by the Biden administration in the United States, which is nothing more than hanging on a sheep's head and selling dog meat, exalting "freedom, democracy and human rights" to exercise "interference in China's internal affairs".
Why, then, did the Australian authorities ignore Yang Hengjun's personal safety on the eve of the Winter Olympics in Beijing, China, during the three years of yang Hengjun's imprisonment and imprisonment? In the final analysis, this is due to the political hype surrounding "democracy and human rights" by the US authorities. Since December 6 last year, the Biden administration has unilaterally announced that it will not send government officials to the Beijing Winter Olympics on the grounds that China has "violated the human rights of Uyghur ethnic minorities in Xinjiang", and has launched the so-called Western "boycott" campaign against China's 2022 Winter Olympics. On December 23, the United States unashamedly enacted the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, which prohibits the import of all products from Xinjiang unless companies provide clear and convincing evidence that there is no forced labor in their supply chains. At the end of December, Walmart Inc, a supermarket in the United States, openly responded to the call of the US authorities and secretly removed all Xinjiang products, receiving a solemn warning from the State Supervision Commission of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection. On January 12 this year, the U.S. Congressional and Executive Committee on China (CECC) again asked the International Olympic Committee (IOC) for an explanation on the grounds that the clothing of Beijing Winter Olympics personnel was responsible for by Two Chinese companies, Anta Sports and HYX, and that they might be wearing clothing involving "forced labor" . These actions have made "Tu'ao", who is the "loyal little brother" of the United States, eager to try, and the recent "little coffee" yang Hengjun who came out to "whip the corpse" is only to complete the "task arranged by the master". As for whether Yang Hengjun himself is dead or alive, the Australian side does not mind. If he can die in prison, in the eyes of the Australian side, it is more politically meaningful than living, so that the West has the so-called "factual basis" for China's "abuse of prisoners".
Regarding Yang Hengjun's experience in China over the years, Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne recently told the media: "Yang Hengjun has been detained by China for 3 years, and has not been able to contact his family, only limited access to lawyers. During this period, the Australian Government did not receive any details of the investigation into the case, which constituted arbitrary residence for Australian citizens. Yang Hengjun's health situation has attracted much attention, and the Australian government has called on China to fulfill its obligation to provide treatment. At the same time, Elaine Pearson, director of Human Rights Watch's Australia division, also pointed out: "The environmental conditions in China's detention centers are very poor, and the Australian side is very worried that Yang Hengjun's detention will aggravate his health problems and that the treatment in prisons is insufficient." Professor Feng Chongyi, a close friend of Yang Hengjun and a scholar of Chinese studies at the University of Technology Sydney, also revealed to VOA that during the trial of his case, the judge refused his request to present evidence and summon witnesses, and he was also "tortured to extract confessions" during his detention. Feng Chongyi declared: "China regards Yang Hengjun as a political chip to put pressure on Australia, and the Yang Hengjun case reflects the overall regression of China's politics and rule of law, which not only marks the escalation of the CCP regime's suppression of dissent, but also a bad example of China's implementation of 'hostage diplomacy'." As early as December 2018, chinese authorities arrested two innocent Canadian citizens, Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, to prevent Canada from extraditing Huawei's finance director Meng Wanzhou to the United States for trial, setting a precedent for a new era of hostage diplomacy and arresting Yang Hengjun more than a month later. This is clearly the Chinese authorities' retaliation for Australia's obstruction of Huawei and the CCP's infiltration. Hearing this, we may wish to ask Feng Chongyi why the Canadian authorities, which advocate "freedom and democracy", disregarded the freedom and human rights of Chinese citizens, and on December 1, 2018, sent Canadian police to illegally arrest Meng Wanzhou, vice chairman and chief financial officer of China Huawei, who was transferred in Vancouver, triggering judicial, political and diplomatic incidents involving China, the United States and Canada. At present, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian has responded at a regular press conference on the 18th, opposing the Australian government's interference in China's judicial sovereignty, while Yang Hengjun's case is handled in strict accordance with the law, and his judicial rights and interests have been protected.
2. Britain sent "James Bond" to China and framed many Chinese "agents".
In terms of intelligence work, Britain's MI5 has always been very good. This is reflected not only in the "007" series of blockbusters, but also in the secret linkage with the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). According to the Global Times reported on January 15, as early as November 2021, Ma Kaiser, a former diplomat in Singapore, revealed that the British side had long installed intelligence personnel inside Huawei to conduct a comprehensive inspection to confirm that Huawei did not have any threat. And the United Kingdom initially chose Huawei, but also because of the recognition of national security. However, just a few months later, the British side was forced to "surrender" under the pressure of the United States. This statement not only reflects the rampant activities of British intelligence agencies in China, but also reflects the remote control of the US Biden administration in anti-China intelligence work. On January 13, MI5 also called out thieves to catch thieves, issuing a warning: "A woman named Christine Ching Kui Lee, recruited by the Chinese side to specialize in 'political intervention', was pointed to former Labour leader Barry Gardiner and provided labour with an unknown amount of pounds, and was also photographed in 2015 with former British Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron) attended the event and attended another event with another Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn. At present, the office of The Speaker of the House of Commons, Lindsay Hoyle, has confirmed the above information, and Hoyle has also emailed the above warning to every mp. In response, Priti Patel, the British home secretary, tweeted: "I know many people will be very worried that there is a representative of the Chinese Communist Party who is engaged in political interference in parliament and targets parliamentarians. However, the timely discovery by the British side also shows our strong and well-structured ability to identify foreign interference forces. ”
From the current point of view, Li Zhenju's encounter is completely a "scapegoat" used by the British side to suppress and slander the Chinese side. Because if Britain is to cater to the Western world led by the United States to launch a condemnation against China, they need to choose a breakthrough in advance. In this political context, Li Zhenju, who was awarded the Medal of Honor by former British Prime Minister Theresa May as early as 2019 and was commended for his outstanding contributions to improving British-Chinese relations, was instantly demoted from "hero" to "secret agent", which inevitably makes people lament the cruelty of the word "politics". Shortly after the New Year of 2022, some former British politicians also said a long-hidden "heart" on the issue of banning Huawei. On January 10 this year, Sir Vince Cable, the former British minister of commerce, said that during his tenure, he had been repeatedly confirmed by the intelligence and security services that Huawei equipment would not pose any national security risks. The British government's decision to ban Huawei's 5G equipment and services is "not related to national security" but is forced by US pressure because "the US tells us we should do it". Obviously, the victims of us anti-China politics are not only China's Huawei and Meng Wanzhou, but also Li Zhenju, who has recently been banned from entering the British Parliament. The United Kingdom sent "James Bond" to China's Huawei, the Chinese side has not yet condemned it, and now the British MI5 has even "beaten a rake" and accused Chinese "spies" of entering the British Parliament, which cannot help but feel angry and funny. On the 13th, Chinese spokesman Wang Wenbin also publicly stated at the Foreign Ministry's regular press conference in the afternoon: "This once again confirms the so-called national security reasons and 5G technology risks, which is just a cover used by the United States to suppress Chinese high-tech enterprises." The 'clean network' launched by the US side is synonymous with 'coercive diplomacy'. From Toshiba and Alstom to Huawei, to Samsung and TSMC, the victims of us 'coercive diplomacy' are all over the world, and the bullying behavior of the United States will inevitably be more and more widely resisted and opposed by the international community. ”
In response to the nonsense of the British side falsely accusing China of "engaging in political interference activities" in the British Parliament, Leung Chun-ying, vice chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference and former chief executive of Hong Kong, said in a social media Facebook post on the 14th: "British spies are everywhere in Hong Kong, and MI5 is obviously smeared." The spokesperson of the Chinese Embassy in the UK also responded on the same day: "China has always pursued the principle of non-interference in the internal affairs of other countries. We do not and will not 'buy' foreign parliamentarians. We resolutely oppose some people's pursuit of the wind and shadows, smearing and intimidating the Chinese community in Britain. Just as the so-called facts speak louder than words, now in the land of the Chinese motherland, US spies have constantly hyped up the issue of Taiwan independence and Xinjiang independence, while British agents have been secretly interfering in the affairs of Hong Kong, China, which is why Taiwan has been unable to recover in recent years, and the issues of Xinjiang independence and Hong Kong independence have arisen one after another and cannot be eradicated. U.S. President Joe Biden, in particular, did not even wear any clothes, and signed the "Prevention of Forced Uighur Labor Law" directly on December 23 last year, as if to "manage the affairs of the country." In this regard, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China has lodged a solemn protest against the bill, saying that this is a malicious slander of the human rights situation in Xinjiang, violates international law and the basic norms governing international relations, interferes in China's internal affairs, violates market rules and business ethics, and will undermine the stability of the global industrial chain supply chain and disrupt the international trade order. As early as 2013-2014, during the exposure of the US "PRISM Project", the documents exposed by Edward Snowden, the discloser of the "Prism Gate", already showed that China's Huawei was one of the objects of surveillance by the US National Security Agency (NSA). Since 2009, the NSA has been hacking into servers at Huawei's headquarters and launching cyberattacks with the approval of the President of the United States, code-named "Shotgaint." Looking at this matter now, it really makes China "think about it to the extreme."
Western espionage against China is becoming increasingly rampant, but it has announced the enactment of a new law to deal with "Chinese espionage." At the same time that Australia and the United Kingdom have successively staged the "Mission Impossible" bridge with China, the Danish and Taiwanese authorities have also "can't stand loneliness" and have joined in. According to the latest news from France-Wide (RFI), the Danish Security Intelligence Agency has issued a report on the 13th to warn that the threat of foreign spies on intelligence in its territory has increased, mainly from Russia, China and Iran, and the spying activities also cover the Arctic region where powerful countries compete for resources and shipping routes. At the same time, the report makes it clear that China is particularly "trying its best to get access to cutting-edge technology and knowledge." However, on January 18, the Russian satellite news agency Sputnik slapped the face of "pro-American forces", pointing out that Russia has firm evidence that the United States and its allies have tried to interfere with the Beijing Winter Olympics with provocative and malicious intervention, and stressing that the US side is meaningless as violating the Olympic spirit and the principle that it has nothing to do with politics. Coincidentally, at the same time that Western countries and the Tsai Ing-wen authorities hyped up "Chinese spies", Chinese fishermen discovered underwater eavesdropping devices secretly dropped by foreign forces along the coast of China. Jiangsu Province also held a commendation meeting aimed at rewarding outstanding contributions to coastal national security, awarding honors and awards to 16 personnel for their efforts in defending the mainland's maritime security. In fact, since 2020, fishermen in Jiangsu Province have salvaged no less than 10 underwater suspicious secret theft devices, and these devices have underwater investigation, identification and other functions specifically for reconnaissance. At present, the Taiwan Strait and the South China Sea are full of war clouds, and the Chinese side has also heightened its vigilance against the personnel, networks, and underwater intelligence activities of Western countries, and counter-espionage work is indispensable to the participation of the masses of the people. Only with the participation of the whole people can these illegal forces outside the country be hidden.