A unique report prepared by New Zealand鈥檚 spies names China, Iran and Russia as some of the few states conducting foreign interference in New Zealand.
罢丑别听Security Threat Environment 2023聽report, released this morning, canvasses threats to national security and provides more detail than what has previously been reported at an unclassified level by the NZ Security Intelligence Service (NZSIS).
Publishing the report honours one of the recommendations following the Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Christchurch terror attack which called for an annual threatscape report.
It discussed several factors impacting New Zealand鈥檚 national security, including violent extremism, foreign interference, strategic competition, declining social trust, technological innovation and global economic instability.
The report highlighted foreign interference activities by three states: the People鈥檚 Republic of China (PRC), the Islamic Republic of Iran and Russia.
It defined foreign interference as 鈥渁n act by a foreign state that is intended to influence, disrupt or subvert New Zealand鈥檚 national interests by deceptive, corruptive or coercive means鈥.
鈥淭here are a small number of states who conduct foreign interference in New Zealand but their ability to cause harm is significant,鈥 the report read.
鈥淭he main targets of interference activities in New Zealand are our migrant and well-established communities who may be viewed as dissidents by a foreign state.
鈥淭hese communities can receive unwanted and unjustified attention from foreign states who conduct malicious activities designed to threaten and disrupt their peaceful life in New Zealand.鈥
NZSIS Director-General of Security Andrew Hampton said competition between states was becoming more acute.
鈥淭his environment is prompting some states to seek advantage through subversive and dishonest means such as espionage and foreign interference against New Zealand and New Zealand鈥檚 interests.
鈥淣ZSIS is very clear that those responsible for the foreign interference threat are the states themselves and the people who act on their behalf.鈥
He also acknowledged the evolution of violent extremism, specifically how some individuals held a range of extremist beliefs without aligning to one in particular.
The development had prompted the NZSIS to adopt the term 鈥渕ixed, unstable and unclear鈥 ideologies, to add to their existing definitions of violent extremism that was motivated by politics, ideology or faith.
More to come
Adam Pearse is a political reporter in the NZ Herald Press Gallery team, based at Parliament. He has worked for 九一星空无限 since 2018, covering sport and health for the Northern Advocate in Whang膩rei before moving to the NZ Herald in Auckland, covering Covid-19 and crime.
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