Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Chinese national arrested with surveillance device near Philippine election commission
ADVERTISEMENT


Manila, April 30 (AFP) Apr 30, 2025
A Chinese national was arrested while operating a surveillance device near the offices of the Philippine election commission, authorities said Wednesday, less than two weeks before the country's mid-term polls.

The man was allegedly using an "IMSI catcher", a device capable of mimicking a cell tower and snatching messages from the air in a one-to-three-kilometre (about 3,200-to-9,800-feet) radius.

Two Chinese men detained in February were accused of using the same device while driving near sensitive government and military locations in Manila.

National Bureau of Investigation spokesman Ferdinand Lavin told AFP the latest arrest was made Tuesday near the offices of the Philippine Commission on Elections (Comelec) after agents confirmed the IMSI was in operation.

"When we made the arrest, that was the third time he had come to Comelec," Lavin said, adding other locations visited included the Philippine Supreme Court, Department of Justice and US Embassy.

The arrested man held a passport issued by Macau, Lavin said, while a hired Filipino driver who cooperated with the operation was not detained. Macau is ruled by China.

Beijing on Wednesday said it was currently in communications with Manila to learn more about the situation while denying any attempt to tamper with Philippine elections.

"We will not and have no interest in interfering in such internal affairs of the Philippines," foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said when asked about the arrest at a daily press conference.

"We also advise individual politicians in the Philippines not to take the chance to hype up issues related to China, make something out of nothing and seize the opportunity to profit," Guo added.

Earlier this month, Beijing made its own allegations of spying, saying it had "destroyed" an intelligence network set up by a Philippine espionage agency and arrested three Filipino spies.

The Philippines' National Security Council (NSC) later said supposed confessions televised on Chinese state media appeared to have been "scripted, strongly suggesting that they were not made freely" and that a spy agency mentioned did not exist.

The espionage accusations come as the two countries confront each other over disputed territory in the South China Sea and as tensions rise over the Philippines' security ties with ally the United States.

Last week, NSC Assistant Director General Jonathan Malaya told a Senate hearing that his agency believed Beijing was likely behind online attacks aimed at influencing the coming mid-term polls.

The Chinese Embassy strongly denied the allegation.

The Philippines' May 12 elections will decide hundreds of seats in the House of Representatives and Senate as well as thousands of local positions.

burs-pfc/oho/dhc

NSC GROUPE


ADVERTISEMENT





Space News from SpaceDaily.com
New Horizons creates first Lyman alpha map of the galactic sky
Amazon launches first Starlink-rival internet satellites
New analysis upends belief that asteroid Vesta has planetary interior

24/7 Energy News Coverage
Should farms grow crops or harvest solar power MSU research supports both
China says EU ties 'inject precious stability' into world economy, trade
BRICS blast 'resurgence of protectionism' in Trump era

Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Threat of India-Pakistan conflict after Kashmir attack
Iran says next nuclear talks with US set for Saturday in Rome, Gets cranky with Paris
Kim oversees warship weapons test-fire, eyes nukes for N. Korea navy

24/7 News Coverage
Canadian firm makes first bid for international seabed mining license
Iraq farmers turn to groundwater to boost desert yields
How climate change turned Sao Paulo's drizzle into a storm



All rights reserved. Copyright Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.