Ministry of Public Security (China) explained

Ministry of Public Security (China) should not be confused with Ministry of State Security (China).

Agency Name:Ministry of Public Security of the People's Republic of China
Nativename A:Chinese: 中华人民共和国公安部
Seal:Police Badge of China.svg
Preceding1:Ministry of Public Security of the Central People's Government
(1949–1954)
Jurisdiction:Government of China
Headquarters:No. 14 East Chang'an Street, Beijing,100741
Motto:"Be loyal to the Party, Serve the People, Be impartial in law enforcement, and strict in discipline"
Employees:1.9 million
Minister1 Name:Wang Xiaohong
Minister1 Pfo:Commissioner General
Deputyminister1 Name:Qi Yanjun
Deputyminister1 Pfo:Chief of Beijing Municipal Public Security Bureau
Deputyminister2 Name:Xu Ganlu
Deputyminister2 Pfo:Director of National Immigration Administration
Deputyminister3 Name:Xu Datong
Deputyminister3 Pfo:Director of Narcotic Control Bureau (China)Narcotic Control Bureau
Deputyminister4 Name:Wang Zhizhong
Deputyminister4 Pfo:Intelligence Director
Deputyminister5 Name:Chen Siyuan
Deputyminister5 Pfo:Director of First Bureau
Deputyminister6 Name:Sun Maoli
Deputyminister6 Pfo:Director of 18th Bureau
Chief1 Name:Ren Airong
Chief1 Position:Leader of the Discipline Inspection & Supervision Team Dispatched from the CCDI & the NSC
Chief2 Name:Feng Yan
Chief2 Position:Politics Supervisor
Chief3 Name:Chen Siyuan
Chief3 Position:the Assistant to the Minister
Agency Type:Constituent Department of the State Council (cabinet-level),
National level police and counterintelligence agency
Parent Department:Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission
Central National Security Commission
Parent Agency:State Council
Child1 Agency:People's Police of China
Child2 Agency:National Immigration Administration (NIA)
Child3 Agency:China Immigration Inspection (CII)
Child4 Agency:China National Central Bureau of Interpol
Child5 Agency:Qincheng Prison

The Ministry of Public Security (MPS,) is a government ministry of the People's Republic of China responsible for public and political security. It oversees more than 1.9 million of the country's law enforcement officers and as such the vast majority of the People's Police. While the MPS is a nationwide police force, conducting counterintelligence and maintaining the political security of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) remain its core functions.[1] [2]

Function

The ministry's functions include intelligence gathering, counterintelligence and maintaining public and political security.[3] It has the primary authority for preventing cyberattacks and it operates the Golden Shield Project.

The ministry was established in 1949 after the CCP's victory in the Chinese Civil War as the successor to the Central Social Affairs Department and was known as Ministry of Public Security of the Central People's Government until 1954. Grand General Luo Ruiqing of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) served as its first minister. As the ministry's organization was based on Soviet and Eastern Bloc models, it was responsible for all aspects of national security; ranging from regular police work to intelligence, counterintelligence and the suppression of anti-CCP political and social sentiments.[4] Military intelligence affairs remained with the General Staff Department, while the CCP's International Department was active in fomenting revolutionary tendencies worldwide by funneling weapons, money and resources into various pro-CCP movements.[5]

The ministry employs a system of public security bureaus throughout the provinces, cities, municipalities and townships of China. The special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macau maintain nominally separate police forces. The ministry is headed by the minister of public security. Wang Xiaohong has been the minister in charge since June 2022.[6]

History

See also: Chinese intelligence activity abroad, Operation Fox Hunt and Operation Sky Net.

The Ministry of Public Security was among the first government organs established in the PRC. It superseded the Ministry of Public Security of the CCP's Central Military Commission (CMC), a transitional body created in July 1949 by removing the security service remit from the CCP's Central Social Affairs Department (SAD). The MPS began operations on 1 November 1949, at the end of a two-week-long National Conference of Senior Public Security Cadres. Most of its initial staff of less than 500 cadres came from the (former) regional CCP North China Department of Social Affairs. At the national level, its creation signaled the formal abolition of the SAD. The ministry moved to its present location, in the heart of the one-time foreign legation quarters in Beijing, in the spring of 1950.[7]

The MPS's Guangzhou office historically handled foreign spies such as Larry Wu-tai Chin.

With the creation of the Ministry of State Security (MSS) in July 1983, MPS lost much of its counterintelligence personnel and remit. Scholars Jichang Lulu and Filip Jirouš have argued that the establishment of the MSS "may have contributed to the illusion that the MPS is simply a law-enforcement police body, separate from intelligence agencies."[8] According to analyst Alex Joske, "the MPS lost much of its foreign intelligence remit after the MSS's creation, but has established new units for cross-border clandestine operations since then." The MPS remains a commonly used cover by MSS officers.[9]

Following the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre, the MPS worked to counter Operation Yellowbird.

The MPS and its officers have been active abroad in Operation Fox Hunt and Operation Sky Net.[10] [11] [12] The MPS under Sun Lijun had reporters from The Wall Street Journal in Hong Kong under "full operational surveillance" for their reporting of the 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) scandal.[13]

In 2017, Europol signed a "strategic cooperation agreement" with the MPS.[14] Starting in 2019, the MPS began replacing "domestic security" with "political security" in the names of its units. In 2020, the United States Department of Commerce added the MPS Institute of Forensic Science to the Entity List over human rights issues related to the Uyghur genocide.[15] The institute was removed from the list in 2023 as part of an agreement during the APEC United States 2023 to combat fentanyl trafficking.[16]

MPS has at times been involved in security diplomacy between China and other countries.[17] For example, between 1997 and 2020, it organized 11 bilateral police diplomacy meetings with African countries. Under Xi Jinping, MPS has increased its training of police officers from other countries.

In 2022, it was reported that the MPS had established numerous overseas police service stations, which sparked investigations by law enforcement organs in multiple countries.[18] [19] [20] In 2023, the United States Department of Justice stated that the MPS engages in covert "intelligence and national security operations far beyond China's borders," including "illicit, transnational repression schemes".[21] The same year, disinformation operations known as Spamouflage or "Dragonbridge" were linked to the MPS.[22] In the run-up to the 2024 United States elections, Spamouflage was identified as having used fake social media accounts in an attempt to amplify divisions in US society.[23]

Organization

The MPS is organized into functional departments (see below). Subordinate to the MPS are the provincial- and municipal-level PSB's (Public Security Bureau) and sub-bureaus at the county and urban district levels. At the grassroots level, finally, there are police stations which serve as the direct point of contact between police and ordinary citizens. While public security considerations have weighed heavily at all levels of administration since the founding of the PRC, the police are perceived by some outside observers to wield progressively greater influence at lower levels of government. Provincial public security bureaus are subject to dual supervision by both local provincial governments and the central government.[24] The ministry is also closely associated with the development of surveillance technologies used by police in China through the Third Research Institute focused on the development of AI based “smart surveillance,” and censorship technologies.[25]

Internal departments

The internal departments of the MPS include the General Office, Supervision, Personnel & Training, Public Relations, Economic Crime Investigation, Public Order Administration, Border Control, Criminal Investigation, Exit & Entry Administration, Special Services, Cyber Security, Detention Center Management, Traffic Control, Legal Affairs, International Cooperation, Equipment & Finance, Drug Control, Counter Terrorism, Science & Technology, Information Technology, Political Security, and others.[26] [27] [28]

Internal publications

See also: Internal media of the Chinese Communist Party.

The journal Public Security Construction()was a classified serial publication for internal purposes. During the disastrous Great Leap Forward between 1958 and 1961, the circular Public Security Work Bulletin was a top-secret serial which often described China's serious food shortages, social unrest and famine directly contradicting Mao Zedong's claims of "bountiful economic fruit".[29]

MPS also produces another journal, People's Public Security News, and a website, China Police Daily, for both internal communication and external publicity.[30] [31]

United front organization

The MPS' First Bureau operates a united front organization called the China Association for Friendship.

See also

References

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Joske . Alex . Alex Joske . 2022-01-25 . Secret police: The Ministry of Public Security's clandestine foreign operations . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20220125040350/https://sinopsis.cz/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/mps0.pdf . January 25, 2022 . 2022-03-02 . Sinopsis . en-US.
  2. Schwarck . Edward . July 2018 . Intelligence and Informatization: The Rise of the Ministry of Public Security in Intelligence Work in China . . en . 80 . 1–23 . 10.1086/697089 . 149764208 . 1324-9347.
  3. Book: Zhang, Angela Huyue . High Wire: How China Regulates Big Tech and Governs Its Economy . . 2024 . 9780197682258 . 10.1093/oso/9780197682258.001.0001.
  4. Book: Guo, Xuezhi . China's Security State: Philosophy, Evolution, and Politics . 2012 . Cambridge University Press . 978-1-139-15089-7 . Cambridge . 64–105 . From the Social Affairs Department to Ministry of Public Security . 10.1017/cbo9781139150897.003 . 1277069527.
  5. Web site: December 1971 . Intelligence Report: The International Liaison Department of the Chinese Communist Party . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120531113802/http://www.foia.cia.gov/CPE/POLO/polo-33.pdf . May 31, 2012 . June 17, 2019 . Central Intelligence Agency.
  6. News: 2022-06-28 . China's Xi Names Police Ally to Head Public Security Ministry . en . . 2023-11-19.
  7. Wang Zhongfang, "Gonganbu shi zemyang chenglide," in Zhu Chunlin (ed.) Lishi shunjian (Beijing: Qunzhong chubanshe, 1999), Vol. 1, pp. 3–16.
  8. Web site: Lulu . Jichang . Jirouš . Filip . 2022-02-21 . Back to the Cheka: The Ministry of Public Security's political protection work . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20220221141840/https://sinopsis.cz/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/mps1.pdf . February 21, 2022 . 2022-03-02 . Sinopsis . en-US . The CCP security apparatus exploits foreign perceptions of the MPS as equivalent to their own police to further its state security mission. Foreign judiciaries and law enforcement agencies cooperating with the MPS and other organs in the CCP political and legal system become ancillary to the protection of the party's political security..
  9. Book: Joske, Alex . . Hardie Grant Books . 2022 . 978-1-74358-900-7 . Melbourne . 27 . en-AUS . Nestling spies in the united front . 1347020692 . Alex Joske.
  10. News: Gan . Nectar . 2015-04-18 . Revealed: the team behind China's Operation Fox Hunt against graft suspects hiding abroad . 2022-04-01 . . en.
  11. News: Rotella . Sebastian . Sebastian Rotella . Berg . Kirsten . July 22, 2021 . Operation Fox Hunt: How China Exports Repression Using a Network of Spies Hidden in Plain Sight . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20220305173754/https://www.propublica.org/article/operation-fox-hunt-how-china-exports-repression-using-a-network-of-spies-hidden-in-plain-sight?token=uoYT3QQC93fqm0Bw2XM2uFPVTHBJBAML . March 5, 2022 . 2022-03-03 . . en.
  12. News: Walden . Max . 2022-01-18 . 'Why stop?': NGO says Australia's failure to block forced return of residents to China has encouraged Beijing . en-AU . . 2022-03-05 . February 28, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220228090124/https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-01-19/china-operations-to-force-fugitives-back/100747234 . live .
  13. News: Wright . Tom . Hope . Bradley . 2019-01-07 . China Offered to Bail Out Troubled Malaysian Fund in Return for Deals . en-US . . 2022-03-05 . 0099-9660 . February 12, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220212163924/https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-china-flexes-its-political-muscle-to-expand-power-overseas-11546890449 . live .
  14. Web site: Godement . François . Vasselier . Abigaël . 2017-12-01 . China at the gates: A new power audit of EU-China relations . 2022-03-06 . . en-GB . March 6, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220306203846/https://ecfr.eu/publication/china_eu_power_audit7242/ . live .
  15. News: Spegele . Brian . Hutzler . Charles . 2023-07-24 . WSJ News Exclusive U.S. Weighs Potential Deal With China on Fentanyl . en-US . . subscription . 2023-07-25 . 0099-9660.
  16. News: 2023-11-16 . US Commerce Dept removes Chinese agency from entity list . en . . 2023-11-16.
  17. Book: Shinn . David H. . China's Relations with Africa: a New Era of Strategic Engagement . Eisenman . Joshua . 2023 . . 978-0-231-21001-0 . New York . David H. Shinn.
  18. News: Griffiths . James . Galea . Irene . 2022-09-21 . Chinese police establish stations overseas in 'worrying' crackdown on citizens abroad . en-CA . . 2022-11-17.
  19. Web site: 2022-11-01 . Secret Chinese 'police stations' to be investigated around Britain . 2022-11-17 . . en-US.
  20. Web site: 2022-11-07 . 'A brazen intrusion': China's foreign police stations raise hackles in Canada . 2022-11-17 . . en.
  21. Web site: 2023-04-17 . Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General David Newman Delivers Remarks Announcing Transnational Repression Cases . 2023-06-17 . . en.
  22. Web site: 2023-11-14 . China is using the world's largest known online disinformation operation to harass Americans, a CNN review finds . 2023-11-14 . . en.
  23. News: Hsu . Tiffany . Myers . Steven Lee . 1 April 2024 . China's Advancing Efforts to Influence the U.S. Election Raise Alarms . 1 April 2024 . The New York Times.
  24. Web site: Cheng . Ming . 1 March 1997 . Spy Headquarters Behind the Shrubs -- Supplement to 'Secrets About CPC Spies' . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210717151455/https://fas.org/irp/world/china/mps/org.htm . July 17, 2021 . 18 July 2021 . Federation of American Scientists.
  25. Web site: Kania. Elsa. 16 November 2017. Seeking a Panacea: The Party-State's Plans for Artificial Intelligence (Part 2). live. 18 July 2021. Centre for Advanced China Research (CACR). July 17, 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210717153753/https://www.ccpwatch.org/single-post/2017/11/15/seeking-a-panacea-the-party-state-s-plans-for-artificial-intelligence-part-2.
  26. Web site: The Ministry of Public Security of the People's Republic of China . 2023-11-05 . University of Minnesota Human Rights Library.
  27. Web site: 2014 . Structure of the public security police; whether witness protection programs exist for those fearing organized crime groups . 2023-11-05 . Refworld . en.
  28. News: February 15, 2024 . How China stifles dissent without a KGB or Stasi of its own . subscription . 2024-02-17 . . 0013-0613.
  29. Book: 2010-08-23 . . 9781139789042 . Cheek . Timothy . Timothy Cheek . 116 . en . 10.1017/cbo9780511781476.
  30. Book: Schoenhals, Michael . 2013-02-18 . . 9781139619714 . 31, 42, 105–106, 129 . en . 10.1017/cbo9781139084765 . 1030095349 . Michael Schoenhals .
  31. Book: Lim . J. . Gender Politics and Mass Dictatorship: Global Perspectives . Petrone . K. . 2010-12-14 . Springer . 9780230283275 . 238 . en . 10.1057/9780230283275 . July 10, 2020 . August 6, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200806015828/https://books.google.com/books?id=Cl6ADAAAQBAJ . live .