Alleged Chinese spies gave Philippine city and police cash and motorbikes

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The website of the Qiaoxing Volunteer Group, a Chinese community organization in the Philippines, shows four men detained in late January in the Philippines on charges of espionage seen with Chinese defense attache Li Jianzhong and the governor of Cagayan province, Manuel Mamba, in this illustration picture taken February 27, 2025. REUTERS/Eloisa Lopez

These photos show Chinese defence attache Li Jianzhong and a Filipino politician with four men accused of spying for Beijing.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Four Chinese nationals accused by the Philippines of espionage led Chinese Communist Party-affiliated groups that made donations of cash to a Philippine city and vehicles to two police forces, according to photos, videos and online posts seen by Reuters.

Wang Yongyi, Wu Junren, Cai Shaohuang and Chen Haitao were among five Chinese men detained by Philippine investigators in late January for allegedly gathering images and maps of Philippine naval forces near the South China Sea.

The five men flew drones to spy on the Philippine navy, said the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI), adding that it found photos and maps of sensitive sites and vessels on their phones.

A senior NBI official told Reuters the men were charged with espionage, which carries a prison term of up to 20 years.

Reuters could not identify a lawyer for the men or establish how they intend to plead. They have not spoken publicly about their arrests and questions directed to them via the Chinese embassy in Manila went unanswered.

The four men were leaders of civic groups overseen by the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) foreign influence network, according to Reuters’ review of articles and multimedia posted by the two groups and in Philippine media.

China’s foreign ministry, in a statement to Reuters, said China required its citizens to abide by local laws and that the civic groups “spontaneously formed and self-managed by the relevant Chinese citizens ... have no affiliation with the Chinese government”.

Wang, Wu and Cai made the donations to the city of Tarlac and to the police forces via the Chinese-backed groups in 2022 and continued to host officials at events through 2024. Reuters could not establish the reason for the donations.

Tarlac is home to major military bases, including one used by the Philippines and the US for live-fire exercises during annual military drills. Photos of bases in the area were not among the sites that the NBI said were found on the men’s devices.

All five detained men also met China’s defence attache in Manila, Senior Colonel Li Jianzhong, at least once in the weeks before their arrest, Reuters found.

Images and videos additionally show Wang, Wu and Cai meeting the attache at least three times in 2024, including in May, when he opened the civic groups’ office in Manila.

Details of the donations made by the men, their interaction with Col Li, and their association with the CCP have not previously been reported.

The ties revealed by Reuters go beyond public statements made by Philippine investigators, who have said the men disguised themselves as “harmless” members of a legitimate organisation.

The NBI said the men were apprehended after “hot-pursuit” operations. It did not specify who the men were suspected of working for.

But Beijing has denied the accusations of espionage, which state media has branded the “smear tactics” of a nation whose Chinese policy “is slipping into an impulsive and irrational abyss”.

The office of the mayor of Manila, whose police force took motorbikes from the men, said in response to Reuters’ questions that the “deed of donation and motorcycles… were found to be in order”.

The mayor of Tarlac city and the two police forces did not respond to requests for comment.

The Philippines does not have a specific foreign interference law, but is currently drafting one amid rising tensions with China.

Government agencies are permitted to receive donations, but contributions from the foreign authorities must be approved by the president, according to guidelines.

The practice of donations has been criticised by academics and the Transparency International non-profit, which has noted that Philippine leaders have sometimes used such donations to solicit bribes.

Reuters uncovered no evidence of bribe payments in this case.

An academic paper co-written by retired Philippine Rear Admiral Rommel Jude Ong and posted in February on the Social Science Research Network platform said Chinese businesses and diaspora networks served as “critical intermediaries” in promoting Beijing’s agenda and Philippine local governments were vulnerable to influence via “economic incentives and donations”.

China has said countries like Australia that have tried to fend off foreign interference by passing new laws are damaging bilateral relations.

Philippine officials present five Chinese nationals detained in late January for allegedly gathering images and maps of Philippine naval forces near the South China Sea.

PHOTO: AFP

China’s ‘magic weapon’

The CCP’s United Front Work Department oversees influence operations carried out by the Chinese diaspora and was once described by Chinese leader Xi Jinping as a “magic weapon”.

The US State Department says it has penetrated governments worldwide “through propaganda and manipulation of susceptible audiences and individuals”.

The Philippines has arrested at least eight alleged Chinese spies in recent weeks. Their detentions have fuelled tensions between the two countries, which share a maritime border and have conflicting claims over territory in the South China Sea.

Manila, a treaty ally of the US, has become a site of geopolitical struggle between the two superpowers, especially since President Ferdinand Marcos Jr brought the Philippines back into Washington’s orbit after a pivot to Beijing under his predecessor.

The recent arrests demonstrate the Philippines’ “need to reconfigure its national security outlook beyond traditional or conventional security threats”, said Mr Don McLain Gill, an international relations expert at Manila’s De La Salle University.

A spokesperson for the Philippine government did not address questions sent via a messaging app.

‘Tell Chinese stories well’

Wang, Wu, Cai and Chen lead the Philippine China Association of Promotion of Peace and Friendship, a civic group founded in 2016. The association’s leaders in 2022 formed a second entity, the Qiaoxing Volunteer Group.

The groups share a website that advertises their CCP affiliation. Both are overseen by the All-China Federation of Returned Overseas Chinese (Acfroc), a CCP-led body engaged in united front work, as Beijing terms influence operations.

The website appeared to no longer be accessible as of Feb 28.

United Front Work Department officials have spoken at the Philippine-based groups’ meetings, according to the website and an Acfroc social media account, with the latest event occurring in May 2024.

Philippine officials have raised concerns about United Front activities.

The military chief said in July the United Front was “slowly entering our country and trying to influence various sectors of our society”.

The detained men openly presented themselves as promoting Chinese interests.

In an article on the social media account of Acfroc’s Shandong province branch, Cai was quoted as saying Qiaoxing would “follow the brand spirit of the Federation of Returned Overseas Chinese, promote China’s excellent culture, tell Chinese stories well” and “make the future of China-Philippines friendship more glorious”.

The groups offered the men opportunities to rub shoulders with prominent Philippine officials.

A July 2022 article published on Shandong Acfroc’s social media account included a photo of Wang handing a cheque worth 500,000 Philippine pesos (S$11,600) and labelled as a municipal “poverty alleviation bursary” to the mayor of Tarlac.

Over the following months, the men continued with the same playbook.

In September, Wang, Wu and Cai donated 10 Chinese-made Sinski motorbikes, worth around US$2,500 (S$3,400) each, to the Manila city police.

A video broadcast by local media showed the vehicles adorned with red ribbons as a smiling Wang stood alongside the capital’s mayor, Dr Honey Lacuna, and fist-bumped a police chief.

Dr Lacuna’s office told Reuters it was the only time the mayor met with any of the members of the group.

The same month, Qiaoxing gave 10 patrol vehicles to the Tarlac police and the city government, according to Shandong Acfroc’s social media account.

The two Chinese groups also publicised regular interactions with the Chinese defence attache in Manila.

Photos on their website, for instance, show four of the men dining and drinking with Col Li and Mr Manuel Mamba, a pro-Beijing provincial governor of Cagayan, at an award ceremony in June 2024.

Mr Mamba told Reuters the men took a picture with him but there was “no conversation as far as I can remember”.

Similarly in May 2024, Col Li was seen in photos and videos posted on Qiaoxing’s website onstage during a party at an upscale Manila restaurant to mark the anniversary of the group.

Nearby, Manila Vice-Mayor John Marvin “Yul Servo” Cruz Nieto cut a five-tiered cake. The vice-mayor told Reuters he did not recall the interaction but said he meets many Chinese organisations as part of his job.

While civilian diplomatic officials regularly interact with civil society, Mr Gill said it was unusual for a defence attache to engage in the way Col Li did.

One of the last accounts on the group’s website is of a January Chinese New Year event hosted by the Chinese embassy, where all five of the detained men posed on stage with the ambassador and Col Li.

The next week, the five were arrested after travelling to naval detachment Oyster Bay, next to the South China Sea, where the authorities said they were “conducting aerial surveillance” while “posing as buyers of marine products, roaming around the city”. REUTERS

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