UK delays Chinese embassy ruling for a second time
The Department of Housing did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The timing of the decision is politically sensitive for Prime Minister Keir Starmer's government after officials were accused of downplaying the threat China poses to Britain's national security by allowing the collapse of a trial of two British men charged with spying for China.
Britain delayed a decision on whether to approve China's plans to build the largest embassy in Europe in London for a second time on Thursday, as ministers faced pressure over the collapse of a trial of men accused of spying for Beijing.
China's plans to build a new embassy on the site of a two-century-old building near the Tower of London have stalled for the past three years because of opposition from local residents, lawmakers and Hong Kong pro-democracy campaigners in Britain. Concerns that the new embassy could be used as a base for spying have prompted some politicians in Britain and the United States to urge the government to block Beijing's plans.
The government's Department of Housing said in a letter seen by Reuters that it would now rule on whether the project could go ahead by December 10, rather than by October 21, because of delays in receiving responses from the interior and foreign ministries. The Department of Housing did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The timing of the decision is politically sensitive for Prime Minister Keir Starmer's government after officials were accused of downplaying the threat China poses to Britain's national security by allowing the collapse of a trial of two British men charged with spying for China. Starmer's Labour government has made improved relations with China a key priority despite allegations that Beijing is behind espionage and cyber-attacks in Britain.
Britain's prosecutors unexpectedly dropped charges last month against two British men, former parliamentary researcher Christopher Cash and academic Christopher Berry, who were accused of spying for Beijing between 2021 and 2023 after the government declined to declare Beijing an enemy. The two men had denied passing politically sensitive information to the Chinese state. The government says the decision to drop the case was made by prosecutors on legal grounds and that ministers did not interfere.
The Chinese government purchased the site for the new embassy, at Royal Mint Court, in 2018 but its requests for planning permission were rejected by the local council in 2022. Chinese President Xi Jinping asked Starmer last year to intervene. Starmer's government then took control of the planning decision. Opposition politicians have called on the government to block the plans because of the proximity to strategic fibre-optic cables that go underneath the site.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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