UK Prime Minister Starmer publishes key witness statements in China spy case

Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer speaks during the Prime Minister's Questions at the House of Commons in London on October 15, 2025. (House of Commons/Handout via REUTERS)
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Updated 16 October 2025
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UK Prime Minister Starmer publishes key witness statements in China spy case

  • Starmer counters accusation that government sabotaged spy case
  • Opponents accuse PM of cover-up and other failures

LONDON: British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Wednesday published a senior official’s evidence in the prosecution of two men charged with spying for China, seeking to demonstrate that the case did not collapse because of government manipulation.
In an unexpected move last month, Britain’s Crown Prosecution Service dropped charges against two British men who had denied passing politically sensitive information to a Chinese intelligence agent.
The CPS said the case was dropped because it needed evidence showing that the UK considered China a threat to national security, but the government had not provided it after months of requests.
While the newly published documents detailed Chinese malign activity, they did not unequivocally state that China posed a threat to UK national security.

Starmer had earlier said the fault lay with the previous Conservative administration which was in power when the men were charged and which had only described Beijing as an “epoch-defining challenge.”
The trial’s collapse has led to accusations from opposition parties that the government was responsible because it did not want to jeopardize ties with China.
Seeking to draw a line under the issue on Wednesday, Starmer published witness statements by Britain’s Deputy National Security Adviser Matthew Collins, which the prime minister said were made without involvement from ministers or political advisers.
In a document dated February 21, Collins said: “China and the UK both benefit from bilateral trade and investment, but China also presents the biggest state-based threat to the UK’s economic security.”
A statement dated August 4 contained a section on the government’s assessment of the threat from China, including details of what he called the “active espionage threat that China posed to the UK.”
A subsequent section in that document added: “It is important for me to emphasize, however, that the UK Government is committed to pursuing a positive relationship with China to strengthen understanding, cooperation and stability.

‘Stinks of a cover-up’ say opponents
Kemi Badenoch, the leader of the main opposition Conservative Party, had earlier told parliament: “This all stinks of a cover-up.”
Starmer’s office said he was told the case was in danger of collapsing a couple of days before it happened but that it would have been inappropriate to intervene.
A Conservative Party spokesperson responded to the release of the documents: “What has already been published shows the extent of the threat that China poses to the UK, and makes it all the more shocking that the Prime Minister knew of the imminent collapse of this trial, but did nothing to stop it.”
The first witness statement from December 2023 said one of the men was allegedly passing on information to China about who was briefing former Prime Minister Rishi Sunak on China. 


US strikes kill 5 on alleged drug boats in Pacific

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US strikes kill 5 on alleged drug boats in Pacific

WASHINGTON: The US military said it killed on Thursday five more alleged drug traffickers aboard two vessels in the Pacific Ocean, bringing the divisive campaign’s death toll to over 100.
The Trump administration has carried out such strikes in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean since September but has provided no evidence that the boats are involved in drug trafficking, prompting debate about the operations’ legality.
The latest strikes hit two vessels in international waters that were “engaged in narco-trafficking operations,” US Southern Command said on X.
Three people were killed in the first vessel and two in the second vessel, it said.
The strikes have now killed 104 people, according to an AFP tally based on official data.
During a September operation, the US military launched a second strike that killed survivors of an initial attack on the same vessel, generating accusations of a war crime.
The use of the military for the anti-drug campaign and Trump’s warnings of a potential land strike in Venezuela have also raised the question whether he should seek authorization from Congress.
The House of Representatives rejected two Democratic resolutions on Wednesday aimed at halting the strikes and “hostilities in or against Venezuela” without its authorization.