Beijing's secret plot to infiltrate UN used Australian insider
ΣΧΟΛΙΟ ΙΣΤΟΛΟΓΙΟΥ : Οι Κινέζοι δεν δέχθηκαν τον παγκόσμιο ηγεμονικό ρόλο τους τον 16ο αιώνα (τότε δεν ήταν κατάλληλα προετοιμασμένοι)…
τον δέχθηκαν τότε όμως οι Ιάπωνες και έπαιξαν τον ρόλο τους μέχρι και τον
20ο αιώνα στην Ασία… τώρα έχει έρθει η σειρά της Κίνας. H Κίνα επιλέχθηκε από
τους Χάζαρους τραπεζίτες να γίνει οικονομικός παράδεισος ήδη από την
δεκαετία του 1970, όταν η βιομηχανική πόλη του Ντιτρόιτ ερήμωσε και η
βιομηχανία της μεταφέρθηκε στην Κίνα.Σήμερα υπάρχει μια ΤΕΡΑΣΤΙΑ εκστρατεία επιρροής και διείσδησης της Κίνας ΠΑΝΤΟΥ σε όλους τους φορείς και οργανισμούς....και γίνεται αθόρυβα, συστηματικά και μελετημένα κάτω απο την μύτη κυριολεκτικά των Δυτικών.
Earlier this year, a petite 62-year-old woman dubbed the ‘‘queen of
the Australian-China social scene’’ walked out of a US federal prison.
Charming
and gregarious, Sheri Yan was once known for hosting soirees around the
world where diplomats mingled with millionaire business executives and
socialites. But her life changed forever in October 2015, when she was
arrested by FBI agents in New York and accused of bribing the former
president of the United Nations General Assembly, John Ashe. Sheri YanCredit:Alamy
Yan’s journey from one of
China’s smallest provinces to the UN’s New York headquarters is itself
extraordinary. Then the FBI’s case opened another window into her story –
a sprawling saga of ambition, greed and power.
The most
intriguing chapter of this tale remains shrouded in mystery, with clues
emerging across three continents – in court documents, phone tap
warrants, and a spy agency raid. The clues, like a trail of breadcrumbs,
all lead back to the same source. The Chinese Communist Party.
According
to 10 serving and former Australian and US national security officials,
the Chinese government was conducting a clandestine foreign
interference operation targeting the most prominent symbol of the global
rules-based order: the UN. This bold operation used UN-approved
non-government organisations (NGOs) with apparently charitable
intentions as fronts for channelling illicit payments to UN diplomats –
via a network of middlemen, millionaires and suspected spies. Yan was a
key player, say some of these sources.
In September, US
prosecutors alluded to Yan’s secret involvement in a second high profile
bribery case. This case involved claims that Hong Kong’s former Home
Affairs minister, Patrick Ho, had bribed another UN general assembly
president, Sam Kutesa. Kutesa’s wife once worked for Yan and phone taps
suggest Yan and Ho were working together to exert corrupt influence
inside the UN.
Yan
and Ho share other similarities. Yan has faced explosive accusations
that she is an agent of Chinese government influence, having been raided
by ASIO. Ho’s alleged connections to Beijing’s security apparatus
involve a black market arms smuggling racket. The Chinese Communist
Party hovers in the background of both Yan and Ho’s stories.
When
asked about Yan, Australian Attorney-General Christian Porter didn’t
call out Beijing directly, but confirmed the UN had been targeted.
‘‘Ensuring political processes are conducted without improper influence
is paramount for all political processes, from local council elections
through to the running of the UN,’’ he said. ‘‘Examples demonstrate that
this is a real problem.’’ Yan’s story shows why.
A new Cold War
On
October 4, at the Hudson Institute in Washington DC, US Vice-President
Mike Pence delivered a speech the impact of which is still being felt.
Pence declared Beijing was interfering ‘‘in the domestic policies of
this country’’ as part of a clandestine and systemic operation. The New York Times said some were calling the speech a portent of a ‘‘new cold war.’’ US Vice President Mike Pence
Despite the scrutiny of Pence’s
comments, few media outlets connected it to a major secret US national
security report. This report underpinned Pence's sweeping assertions
about the way Beijing's foreign interference operations are aimed at
goverments, universities and businesses. Even less known was that the
origins of this US report lay over the Pacific Ocean, in another highly
classified project led by former senior Australian government official
John Garnaut.
The Garnaut report, written with ASIO, assessed the
scale of Chinese government interference in Australia and, in July,
prompted sweeping reforms of Australia’s national security laws. While
he has declined to be interviewed about his work, Garnaut recently wrote
in The Monthly about how the Communist Party’s United Front Work Department engages in foreign interference.
To
influence "foreign actors," Garnaut said United Front agencies
sometimes engage in ‘‘covert operations aided by [Chinese] intelligence
agencies."
Before becoming a public servant, Garnaut knew Yan. As
Fairfax Media’s highly regarded China correspondent, Garnaut broke the
story of her arrest in October 2015. It was Garnaut who had dubbed Yan
the ‘‘queen’’ of the Australia-China social scene.
‘‘Our paths had
crossed both professionally and in Australian expatriate social
circles,’’ Garnaut later wrote in a legal statement after he was sued by
a businessman named in his Yan story. ‘‘I had gone to ... [Yan’s] house
once because she was offering me entrée into elite Chinese political
circles.’’
In his statement, Garnaut, described Yan as ‘‘a fixer/mediator/consultant’’ who likely moved in United Front circles.
According
to national security sources with knowledge of the Yan case, it was
this same suspicion, along with the belief that Yan was somehow involved
in intelligence work, that brought ASIO agents to her Canberra
apartment in October 2015.
A senior security official told Fairfax
Media he considered Yan an agent of influence, a conduit to help
Beijing meddle in the affairs of other countries. ‘‘Her motivation has
been making money and as she got better at doing that, she became useful
to Chinese government agencies,’’ the official said.
Yan wasn’t
home when ASIO came knocking. She was in New York, in the custody of the
FBI, who were about to charge her with bribing John Ashe. In Canberra,
the ASIO agents handed their search warrant to the man who had opened
Yan’s front door and who they knew as one of their own: Yan’s husband,
Roger Uren, a former Australian government intelligence official.
Only
12 months earlier, Yan and Uren had helped Yan’s father, Yan Zhen, host
a one man art exhibition at the UN’s New York headquarters to celebrate
the transition of the UN General Assembly presidency from Ashe to
Kutesa. The event was also a celebration of Yan’s own rise. She worked
the crowd, at ease among the notables of the diplomatic world, including
Ashe and UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon.
Yan's arrest in New
York and the raid on her Canberra property marked the beginning of a
mortifying fall for a woman who was at the peak of her powers, mixing
with the rich and powerful, flying business class and wearing designer
clothes.
From re-education to riches
Sheri
Yan was born Shiwei Yan in 1956 in Anhui province. She lived in a
writers' compound with her father, a renowned poet and painter, mother
and brother until the Cultural Revolution swept through China and her
parents were sent to Mao’s feared re-education camps. Yan was 11 years
old. She stayed in the compound to fend for herself, wearing her
mother’s old clothes and receiving handouts from her former nanny. Four
years later, Yan joined an arts and culture troupe run by Mao’s Red
Guards. It would be another five years before she was finally reunited
with her family.
After studying to become a journalist, Yan worked
for the Communist Party’s propaganda outlet China National Radio in
Beijing and married her first husband. Wanting more, and with China’s
economy opening up under President Deng Xiaoping, Yan took her first big
risk.
Her mother sewed $400 into the lining of her jacket and Yan
flew to the US to work as a journalist and to learn English, leaving
her husband and old life behind.
It was in Washington DC where
Yan’s connection to Australia was forged. There, she met Uren, an
eccentric and erudite mid-career Australian diplomat who was writing a
book about Mao’s feared spy chief Kang Sheng.
The
pair fell in love and she travelled with Uren to Canberra when he was
posted to a senior role at Australia's peak intelligence agency, the
Office of National Assessments. In 1996, they had a daughter. Sheri Yan and Roger Uren
For the partner of a senior
intelligence official, Yan mixed in curious circles. In the 1990s, Yan
introduced friends to a passing acquaintance from Beijing, Liu Chaoying.
Liu was wealthy, well-educated and had impeccable connections to senior
Chinese political and military figures. Liu also had a hidden hustle.
According to the later findings of a US senate committee, Liu secretly
worked as Chinese military intelligence colonel. The committee accused
her of funnelling donations to the Clinton presidential campaign as a
means of giving the Communist Party secret sway in US politics, an
activity with all the hallmarks of a classic United Front influence
operation.
A close friend of Yan says she knew nothing of Liu's
alleged spying activity until it was revealed in the late 1990s, after
Liu had returned to Beijing.
In 2001, Uren quit his intelligence
agency posting and Yan landed a job advising US computer software mogul
Peter Norton about how to win business from Chinese state-owned
enterprises. Norton and Yan's efforts were hugely successful. Soon, Yan
was calling four cities home: Beijing, Canberra, Washington DC and New
York.
She also launched a Beijing consulting firm specialising in
‘‘Australia and China business, government and media relationships.’’
She told prospective clients that former Labor leader Kim Beazley (an
old family friend of Uren) was a key backer. ‘‘He was named a
vice-president but he didn’t even know about it,’’ recalls a business
associate, who says Yan spruiked her ability to open doors in China to
the ABC, Liberal Party heavyweight Maurice Newman and former senior
Labor minister Martin Ferguson.
Emails obtained by Fairfax Media
reveal that in Beijing, Yan was hired to promote a summit that was being
hosted by two Communist Party aligned organisations engaged in United
Front work. The invitation Yan sent to Australian business contacts
described a ‘‘small-scale, high-level’’ event with ‘‘30 top government
officials, elite business executives and academic experts’’ discussing
‘‘valuable views ... for the reference for each nation’s top leaders.’’
But her boldest venture was yet to come.
'Purely altruistic' work
In
2012, the woman who had left China almost two decades earlier was
preparing to launch her own organisation to help the UN reduce global
poverty and aid development.
The Global Sustainability Foundation
would, according to Yan’s pitch, be backed by ‘‘political leaders,
successful business people, and members of the world’s best-known
families.’’ At least some of this was true. Yan announced former
Australian chairman of top law firm Freehills, Ian Hutchison, as GSF’s
‘‘Vice Chairman of the Board’’ and Australia’s former New York consul
general, Phil Scanlan, as a GSF board adviser. Figures close to both men
say they believed GSF was purely altruistic, and Fairfax Media does not
suggest otherwise. Sheri Yan, Phil Scanlon (centre) and Ian Hutchison (left) at the launch of the NGO Global sustainability foundation
She gained their trust by wheeling out GSF’s most important backer, a
well-connected Antiguan diplomat called John Ashe who had chaired
various global initiatives and would, in 2013, become the 68th UN
General Assembly president.
Yan also received UN accreditation for the GSF.
The Global Sustainability Foundation
This was less reassuring than it appeared. As Yan’s NGO was receiving
its UN seal of approval, the UN’s internal affairs team issued an
urgent and confidential memo (obtained by Fairfax Media) stating that
NGOs were being used as fronts to access diplomatic officials and engage
in ‘‘bribery, and tax evasion.’’ Intended as a warning, the report
could have doubled as the business plan for Yan’s foundation.
While
the GSF was engaged in some altruistic work, evidence gathered by the
FBI suggests Yan’s appointment of Ashe as a GSF adviser was to enable
Yan to pay him a monthly bribe of $20,000, supplemented by larger
kickbacks.
Yan also hired as a GSF adviser Edith Kutesa, the wife
of the 69th UN General Assembly president Sam Kutesa. There is no
evidence Yan was directly bribing the Kutesas, although information
gathered by the FBI and recently disclosed in a US court suggests that
other Communist Party-aligned figures close to Yan had plans for this to
occur. What is certain is that by 2015, Yan had the 68th and 69th
presidents of the UN General Assembly ensconced in her NGO.
Ashe
was on its payroll and Kutesa’s wife was appointed as ‘‘a major member
of the Board.’’ If Yan’s gushing press release about Edith Kutesa’s
appointment was intended to garner international media attention, it
failed. But the west's national security agencies were watching. Sheri Yan and John Ashe at the launch of the Global Sustainability Foundation.
Communist Party links
By 2015, the FBI was covertly
monitoring Yan, Ashe and Kutesa’s communications. The inquiry’s precise
origins, though, are unknown. The FBI has only ever publicly let on that
it was conducting a bribery probe. But it is clear that a
counter-espionage investigation was also underway. This investigation
had Yan pegged as one of more than a dozen suspects involved in three UN
NGOs with links back to the Communist Party in Beijing.
According to court filings and a lawyer for one of the suspects, U.S. officials applied to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court
to conduct electronic surveillance on at least two of these suspects
over allegations they were involved in Chinese intelligence and
interference operations.
Australian security sources have
confirmed that US investigators were also liaising with Australian spy
agency ASIO. In 2015, it was given approval by Attorney General George
Brandis to use its powers to investigate Yan.
Court files suggest
that Yan’s recruitment of Ashe began on the sidelines of a ‘‘high
level’’ international conference in Hong Kong which Yan had sponsored
but which was run by a UN NGO founded by a Macau gaming mogul, Ng Lap
Seng. Ng has for years been something of an international man of
mystery.
In the late 1990s, US authorities investigated Ng’s links
to the Communist Party and triad organised crime gangs as part of the
same donations-for-influence scandal involving the Clinton
administration and Yan's old acquaintance, Colonel Liu Chaoying.
Ng
had Beijing’s distinct seal of approval: he’d been appointed a member
of an important arm of the United Front, the Chinese People’s Political
Consultative Conference (CPPCC). When Ng set up his UN-affiliated NGO
South-South News, the FBI again found evidence that the Communist Party
was influencing the organisation and determining the agenda it would
push as it hosted conferences and published news stories.
Ng was, like Yan, bribing John Ashe.
The
third NGO under scrutiny by the FBI was run by Patrick Ho, a genial man
hand-picked by Beijing to help oversee Hong Kong’s handover from
British to mainland Chinese sovereignty in 1997. This loyalty was
rewarded when he was appointed as Hong Kong’s minister of home affairs, a
position he held from 2002 to 2007. Ho was also a United Front CPPCC
member. The NGOs
In early October, it was revealed in a US court filing that Ho, who
was behind an NGO called the China Energy Fund Committee, was allegedly
involved with Chinese security officials in black market arms trading
with Sudan and Qatar. Ho’s NGO is also accused in court documents of
seeking to influence Ashe and Kutesa.
Ho allegedly paid Kutesa
$500,000 in bribes. When Ho sought to bribe Ashe, he allegedly looked to
Yan’s foundation for advice. A June 2014 phone call tapped by the FBI
captured Ho and a person described in court documents as ‘‘associate
one’’ – but whom Fairfax Media has confirmed is either Yan or her
second-in-charge at the GSF – discussing how to pay off Ashe. The wire
Handing over cash was was "not a problem", said Ho, who had allegedly already made one $50,000 payment.
‘‘The problem is – uh, it’s give and take,’’ said Ho. Ashe, it seems, was more of a taker.
Feeding the beast: Yan and the 68th president
The
evidence gathered by the FBI suggested Ashe was constantly demanding
bribes from Yan. His greed knew few bounds. Ashe wanted flights, Rolex
watches and cash to fund an indoor basketball court at his New York
home. To feed the beast, Yan and her NGO in effect operated as an
intermediary for figures in China with deep pockets.
A US
government diplomatic cable provided to Fairfax Media by the Antiguan
government confirms the identity of some of the alleged ultimate funders
of the bribes Yan was funnelling to Ashe.
Wealthy businessman,
media executive and CPPCC member Ye Maoxi allegedly funnelled $300,000
to Ashe via Yan in return for Antiguan citizenship for himself ‘‘and
others’’ and to have Antiguan officials establish offshore banks
there. Calls to Xiking Advertising Group were not answered. A
spokesperson for Propeller TV, Ye’s U.K.-based television network,
declined to comment.
A $100,000 bribe was funded by Liu Wei, also
known as William Liu. He wanted the Antiguan government to award China
National Software and Security Co. – a state-owned company with deep
link to Beijing's security agencies – a contract ‘‘to build a national
internet security system’’.
Ashe also introduced China National to
an unnamed Kenyan ‘‘senior intelligence official,’’ claim
prosecutors. Attempts to seek comment from China National were
unsuccessful. Following the money
In the blur of names and NGOs, it is easy to get confused. It is
perhaps why Yan’s story has mostly been reported as a straightforward
kickbacks case, a cautionary tale of avarice. Yet serving and former
national security officials in Australia and the US note the pattern of
conduct displayed by Yan’s NGO and the two others like it, along with
their deep connections to the Communist Party. Under the guise of
charitable and altruistic policy work, the NGOs all combined clandestine
and corrupt means to influence powerful UN officials.
Former US
intelligence official and expert on Chinese government intelligence,
Mark Stokes, has reached the same conclusion as these officials: ‘‘Most
certainly it is part of a broader campaign of influence at the UN.’’
It
is a campaign that reached the very pinnacle of the general assembly,
the primary policy-making and voting chamber of the United Nations. The
two presidents implicated in the corruption scandal, Ashe and Kutesa,
both had the ability to influence voting blocs and shape the assembly's
agenda.
Repeated corrupt acts
In July, shortly after Yan
left her US prison cell, Ng Lap Seng of South-South News was jailed for
four years. While prosecuting Ng’s case, US attorney Dan Richenthal
accused Communist Party officials of directing Ng’s UN NGO and his plans
to host a UN conference centre in Macau. In addition to enhancing
China’s power and prestige, a UN conference centre in Macau would
present China with significant intelligence-gathering and recruitment
opportunities, said one former senior US intelligence official.
Patrick
Ho, who has denied all wrongdoing as he faces trial for funnelling $2.9
million to UN and African officials, was a tireless advocate through
his UN NGO of the Belt and Road project. The project is Chinese
President Xi Jinping’s signature venture promoting China-led investment
and infrastructure projects around the world. How persuasive Ho's
advocacy was is hard to say.
But there are signs Beijing’s campaign of influence has been working.
In
the past two years, numerous top UN officials have given the Belt and
Road their stamp of approval, sometimes echoing official Chinese talking
points nearly word for word.
According to Yan’s friends, Yan’s
driving motivation was making money and gaining status. But national
security officials say the network she built to do this was clearly
useful for a Communist Party expanding its technological, intelligence
and diplomatic reach. Those who funded the bribery for which Yan was
jailed variously sought a national internet security contract,
connections to a Kenyan senior intelligence official, foreign passports
and offshore bank accounts, and a base in Southern China for future UN
conferences.
Her husband, Roger, insists the suspicion about Yan
is ill founded. On Thursday, he told Fairfax Media that "Sheri has had
no connections with any Chinese government agency" and has not "the
slightest interest in Australian security or strategic issues."
In
her final sentencing hearing, Yan's true self remained elusive. Her
character witnesses described her ‘‘generosity, compassion, purity and
good intentions’’.
But US prosecutors described a woman who
performed corrupt acts ‘‘repeatedly, over time, in multiple ways, and
without any apparent hesitation.’’ If the headline of Yan’s story
involves a foreign interference operation targetting the UN – as claimed
by multiple national security insiders – it also exemplifies the
symbiotic relationship between the Communist Party and their aligned
oligarchs and ostensibly private fixers.
As the party’s desires
are subsumed into those of certain businesses and NGOs, disentangling a
bribery scandal from a foreign interference operation becomes difficult.
After
Yan’s release from jail earlier this year, she sought permission from
US authorities to return to her first home to care for an ailing parent.
She flew to Beijing shortly after it was granted – back to the country
whose rise had helped Yan amass her own fortune, but whose government's
demands may have precipitated her own spectacular fall.
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