BEIJING: Some Western media, using an alleged name list of 1.95 million members of the Communist Party of China (CPC), have launched a new round of witch hunts by accusing the people on the list of working in foreign consulates in China and foreign companies’ Chinese branches for intelligence purposes, even though the authenticity of the database has been highly questionable.
Observers said that the narrative that connects CPC membership to intelligence work and security risks was “ridiculous and ignorant of Chinese society.”
CPC members are working in foreign consulates in Shanghai and Chinese branches of major foreign companies, including IKEA, Volkswagen and Pfizer, an Australian media outlet the Australian and the UK’s Sunday Mail reported, citing a “leaked document” presented by the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, a newly established ideologically driven group of some 150 legislators, including US anti-China Senator Marco Rubio.
The leaked name list involves 1.95 million people and includes their birth dates, positions, ID numbers and some phone numbers.
Ignoring the fact that it constituted a massive privacy breach, Western media hyped the list as evidence of CPC-sponsored intelligence activities, despite failing to prove that any of the 1.95 million is connected to intelligence affairs.
The reports described the stealing of CPC members’ private information as a brave action to reveal the Party’s structure and “infiltration,” without mentioning its illegal nature and harm it caused to those alleged Party members who are just ordinary people.
The database may also be fabricated, Chen Hong, a professor at East China Normal University, whose name is on the list, told the Global Times on Monday, pointing out that he was never a member of the CPC but was a member of another party in the Chinese political system.
“I suspect the database is completely erroneous,” Chen said.
Volkswagen China told the Global Times that joining any political party is an employee’s personal decision and they do not interfere. Volkswagen respects every employee’s political affiliation globally and their business will not be affected by that. Volkswagen has not set up a Party branch in China.
IKEA, one of the companies said to have CPC members on its payroll, told the Global Times on Monday, “We don’t have knowledge of, or an interest in, our co-workers’ political party affiliations. We respect each other’s different views and strive to be an inclusive workplace for all.”
Employees of companies included in the database also found the reports of being a “security risk” ridiculous, as companies would not care about their employees’ political stance and affiliation.
“Will your employer in the US ask whether you are a Republican or a Democrat before recruiting you?” an employee of a multinational firm in Shanghai asked, speaking to the Global Times on condition of anonymity.
Some people reached by the Global Times pointed out that speculation of CPC members posing security risks is another example of how little anti-China forces know about Chinese society.
– The Daily Mail-Global Times News exchange item