British BulletinBritish Bulletin
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech & Science
  • Travel
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Press Release
What's On

Two Iran-linked men charged on suspicion of spying for Tehran after targeting Jews in London

18 March 2026

Sadiq Khan skewered for ‘biased’ mass open prayer after Tory criticism sparks PMQs row​: ​’Tone deaf!’

18 March 2026

Sarah Ferguson’s 40-year-old Freedom of the City honour at risk as decision looms

18 March 2026

Restaurant boss Ian Leigh holds Rachel Reeves ‘directly responsible’ for site closure leading to 14 job losses

18 March 2026

Louis Theroux Manosphere documentary slammed by Women’s Aid in fierce statement

18 March 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Web Stories
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
British Bulletin
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech & Science
  • Travel
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Press Release
British BulletinBritish Bulletin
Home » China could be exploiting Britain’s laws to ‘piece together classified intelligence’ on UK security
Politics

China could be exploiting Britain’s laws to ‘piece together classified intelligence’ on UK security

By britishbulletin.com18 March 20263 Mins Read
China could be exploiting Britain’s laws to ‘piece together classified intelligence’ on UK security
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

British government officials have grown increasingly alarmed that China may be weaponising the UK’s transparency laws to accumulate unclassified intelligence on defence and national security matters.

According to individuals with knowledge of the situation, government figures have identified what appears to be a coordinated pattern of freedom of information requests targeting sensitive areas.


Suspicions have mounted that Beijing could be responsible for a substantial portion of these enquiries.

The concern centres on how seemingly innocuous pieces of publicly available data might be combined to expose classified information when viewed collectively.

Officials believe hostile actors are systematically probing government departments to extract details that, while individually harmless, could prove valuable when assembled together.

Tony Blair’s Freedom of Information Act, enacted in 2000, requires applicants to provide their genuine name and a correspondence address when submitting requests.

However, government bodies rarely verify these details in practice, and proof of identity is not mandatory under the legislation.

This weakness makes tracing the actual source of enquiries extremely difficult for authorities.

Beijing’s growing influence is a cause for concern in London

|

PA

Conservative MP Alicia Kearns, who serves as shadow national security minister, has demanded ministers close this vulnerability in the system.

She urged action to catch out “any Tsarist, Ayatollah-linked or Little Red Book-carrying man pretending to be a Tom, Dick or Harry”.

Although the legislation already contains multiple exemptions, including provisions protecting national security, and only obliges departments to release unclassified material, officials remain troubled by the potential for exploitation.

Intelligence professionals refer to this technique as the “mosaic effect” – where individual data points, harmless in isolation, can be pieced together to reveal sensitive information.

Within Whitehall, there is particular anxiety about narrowly focused enquiries targeting specific defence programmes, cyber security infrastructure, and the state’s relationships with universities and private industry.

“There’s a growing awareness that FOI is being used by hostile states — and China in particular — specifically in relation to defence matters,” one official told the FT.

The Ministry of Defence has taken precautionary steps, halting publication of all FOI responses on the government website in February last year.

Defence officials attributed this suspension to awaiting a new online publishing system, describing it as a temporary measure whilst continuing to process individual requests directly.

The former Royal Mint in Tower Hamlets, east London, the proposed site of China’s mega-embassy

|

PA

Security minister Dan Jarvis addressed Parliament last November, warning that “China has a low threshold for what information is considered to be of value, and will gather individual pieces of information to build a wider picture”.

Parliament’s joint intelligence and security committee highlighted Beijing’s “considerable appetite for collecting unclassified information” in its landmark 2023 China report, noting such activity would often fall outside UK criminal law and prove harder to detect.

Luke de Pulford, who leads the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, pointed to the “irony” of “a notoriously opaque country using UK transparency laws to find out sensitive information”.

However, Maurice Frankel of the Campaign for FOI expressed doubt, noting civil servants already reject requests on “jigsaw effect” grounds when they suspect potential misuse.

A government spokesperson stated: “National security will always come first.”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Sadiq Khan skewered for ‘biased’ mass open prayer after Tory criticism sparks PMQs row​: ​’Tone deaf!’

Keir Starmer’s ‘wobbly’ position on Iran torn apart by top Tory

Christopher Hope left outraged after Ed Davey’s ‘ridiculous’ GB News attack during PMQs: ‘Deeply offensive!’

Keir Starmer is bracing for an immigration showdown; my hunch is the PM will U-turn – Olivia Utley

St Andrews University told to act after students berated Reform UK supporters at pub social

Reform wins first councillor on authority in boost for Nigel Farage’s party in Wales

Nigel Farage makes fresh energy demand to Keir Starmer in fiery PMQs exchange: ‘Time we changed course!’

Nearly 10k Afghans are still waiting for relocation to Britain as part of £5.7 BILLION scheme

Iran war likely to create ‘surge of illegal migrant crossings’ into Britain, National Crime Agency warns

Editors Picks

Sadiq Khan skewered for ‘biased’ mass open prayer after Tory criticism sparks PMQs row​: ​’Tone deaf!’

18 March 2026

Sarah Ferguson’s 40-year-old Freedom of the City honour at risk as decision looms

18 March 2026

Restaurant boss Ian Leigh holds Rachel Reeves ‘directly responsible’ for site closure leading to 14 job losses

18 March 2026

Louis Theroux Manosphere documentary slammed by Women’s Aid in fierce statement

18 March 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest Brittan News and Updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News

Thousands face fines and ‘prison’ over little-known mobility scooter rule impacting road safety

18 March 2026

Drogheda United: Joanna Byrne reiterates stance despite being told to resign by Trivela Group

18 March 2026

Locals fuming as 60 ‘wrongly placed’ caravans have ‘ruined their lives’

18 March 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 British Bulletin. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.