France has arrested two suspected Chinese spies who allegedly used a sleepy village in the southwest of the country to gather intelligence. The men, aged 27 and 29, installed a large parabolic antenna in their garden, which was directed at the sky, coinciding with a spate of cuts to internet services in the area.
The French General Directorate for Internal Security (DGSI) agency raided the house where the pair lived and seized a large quantity of computer equipment. The men were questioned and have now been charged with "delivering information to a foreign power... likely to damage the interests [of France]".
According to intelligence experts, south-western France is increasingly targeted by Chinese spies due to its proximity to defence, aerospace, and telecommunications sites. The region has seen several cases of espionage in recent years, including the detention of a 51-year-old Chinese engineer who was suspected of trying to intercept signals from a French military satellite.
France has recently decided to take cases like this to court, suggesting a greater determination to publicise the espionage threat from China. In one case, a mathematics researcher at a university in Bordeaux was placed under judicial investigation for "providing information to a foreign power".
The latest arrest is likely to be linked to the growing tensions between France and China over intellectual property rights, trade, and security issues. The region where the suspects were arrested has strong ties with China through diplomatic and economic channels.
Locals in Camblanes-et-Meynac, where the suspects lived, are said to have been bemused by the story, with one resident suggesting that they just wanted a quiet place to live.
The French General Directorate for Internal Security (DGSI) agency raided the house where the pair lived and seized a large quantity of computer equipment. The men were questioned and have now been charged with "delivering information to a foreign power... likely to damage the interests [of France]".
According to intelligence experts, south-western France is increasingly targeted by Chinese spies due to its proximity to defence, aerospace, and telecommunications sites. The region has seen several cases of espionage in recent years, including the detention of a 51-year-old Chinese engineer who was suspected of trying to intercept signals from a French military satellite.
France has recently decided to take cases like this to court, suggesting a greater determination to publicise the espionage threat from China. In one case, a mathematics researcher at a university in Bordeaux was placed under judicial investigation for "providing information to a foreign power".
The latest arrest is likely to be linked to the growing tensions between France and China over intellectual property rights, trade, and security issues. The region where the suspects were arrested has strong ties with China through diplomatic and economic channels.
Locals in Camblanes-et-Meynac, where the suspects lived, are said to have been bemused by the story, with one resident suggesting that they just wanted a quiet place to live.