Besides the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in the United States, MI6 is the only other spy agency the MSS has publicly named. In other cases, it simply used the descriptions “some country” and a “foreign spy agency”.
One of the employees in this case, surnamed Wang, worked in a position dealing with top state secrets, the MSS said in a WeChat article on Monday. It said he applied for an exchange programme to Britain in 2015.
According to the MSS, after Wang reached Britain, MI6 arranged for staff to invite him to parties and set up tours. After determining he could be persuaded financially, MI6 sent operatives to befriend him on campus, telling him of high-reward part-time opportunities, the ministry said in its WeChat post.
China’s anti-spy agency said after a while, MI6 disclosed its identity to Wang and asked him to serve the British government, offering higher pay and security. They then trained Wang as a spy and sent him back to China to gather more intelligence, the MSS said.
Wang’s wife, surnamed Zhou, also worked for a core confidential government agency in China and MI6 offered to double its pay to involve Zhou as well, the ministry said, adding that after rounds of threats and persuasion, Zhou also agreed to collect intelligence for Britain.
The case was currently being investigated, it said.
In the statement at the time, the ministry said MI6 had developed a “cooperative relationship for intelligence” with the person, surnamed Huang, since 2015, and provided training and spy equipment.
Previously, the ministry accused the CIA of being behind a handful of espionage cases, such as turning a worker in a Chinese state-run arms company to spy for them.
They had either sent tips or reported suspicious activities through the MSS hotline, website portal, WeChat or reported in person, and cooperated with the ministry in follow-up investigations, it said.