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Treasury 'lobbied to block China audit' as questions mount over collapsed espionage trial

The Treasury lobbied the Prime Minister's national security adviser to block reports on the threat posed by China in the midst of the probe against the two men accused of spying for Beijing

HM Treasury sign(Image: PA)

The Treasury pressured Prime Minister Keir Starmer's national security adviser, Jonathan Powell, to suppress reports detailing Beijing's threat during the investigation into two individuals accused of espionage for China.

The Telegraph reports that in June, Powell determined the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ government would withhold publication of espionage details from the Foreign Office's China audit, a comprehensive cross-Whitehall examination of Britain's relations with Beijing, as reported by .

His choice came after Treasury officials argued that disclosing information from the "comprehensive" assessment of China's influence in Britain might harm trade and investment connections.

Parliamentary members anticipated the government would release redacted information regarding China's national security threat from the audit during the summer months.

Nevertheless, following Treasury objections, Powell chose to incorporate the report into his National Security Strategy (NSS), a distinct document published in June, The Telegraph revealed.

A government representative stated the China audit remained unpublished in detail due to much of its classified nature.

This emerges as the government faced criticism for declining to designate China as a national security threat, seeking to safeguard the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's commercial relationship with the nation. The media is questioning whether ministers or Powell had any involvement in the dismissal of an espionage case against two men earlier this month.

The Prime Minister, currently visiting India, has denied that ministers played a role in the trial's collapse.