A new report by the Heritage Foundation, a U.S.-based conservative think tank is cautioning that China may be spying on African government officials from within their own buildings.
According to the report, Chinese companies have built at least 186 government buildings in Africa and 14 “sensitive intragovernmental telecommunications networks.” These buildings include residences for heads of state, parliamentary offices, police or military headquarters.
The author of the report, Joshua Meservey, a senior policy analyst for Africa at the Heritage Foundation, said the research does not prove there is spying going on at these buildings, but he believes the possibility should be explored.
Joshua Meservey
“The Chinese government has a long history of all types of surveillance and espionage globally,” Meservey said in an interview. “So, we know this is the sort of thing they want to do, the sort of thing they have the capacity to do. And also, Africa is important enough to them to do it.”
Meservey also noted that even private Chinese companies are “legally obliged” to help the Chinese Communist Party collect intelligence.
Chinese government’s response
However, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Zhao Lijian strongly condemned the report, saying it was filled with “lies, illusions and ideological bias.”
Zhao Lijian
“We urge [a] certain think tank in the U.S. to spend more time and energy on assisting Africa with real actions instead of spreading lies,” Lijian said, according to the official transcript of his remarks at a conference. “The African people have a fair judgment. Attempts to drive a wedge between the friendly partners of China and Africa will only lead to self-inflicted humiliation.”
But Meservey said the idea for the report came from the 2018 accusation that China had installed listening devices in the African Union, AU, headquarters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. The findings, first published by the French newspaper Le Monde, alleged that servers in the AU headquarters were secretly sending data to a computer system in Shanghai each day between midnight and 2 a.m.
“The computer systems were delivered turnkey,” Le Monde wrote in 2018. “And Chinese engineers have deliberately left two flaws: backdoors, which give discrete access to all internal exchanges and productions of the organization.”
Reactions to Le Monde’s allegations
AU and Chinese officials denied the report by Le Monde. Kuang Weilin, China’s ambassador to the AU, described the allegations as absurd and said they were designed to undermine Sino-African relations.
But Meservey believes the AU spying may be just the tip of the iceberg. He said China’s motives for investing so heavily in building infrastructure for African governments is a suspect because these projects generally are not profitable.
“For decades, a central element of China’s international diplomatic efforts has been cultivating strong relationships with senior African officials and giving them glitzy, brand-new government buildings,” Meservey said. “It is clearly a way of building favour with these governments … These are designed as pieces of political influence.”
His report found that Chinese companies had built at least 24 African presidential or prime ministerial palaces, residences or offices and at least 26 parliaments or parliamentary offices. Meservey said China might be looking to pick up information from third-party countries such as the U.S. when its diplomats visit African countries. He said it might be interested in gathering financial data on African countries for future investments and gaining the upper hand in loan negotiations. China also may be looking to collect useful, personal information about African leaders.
“It’s possible to gather information on specific leaders, learn about their habits, their predilections, their financial situation, things that you could use to manipulate them or even to recruit them as an asset either through blackmail or just knowing how to tailor your pitch to them,” he said.