China’s revised state secrets law would bar any official with access to confidential information from going abroad without approval, while also giving police broader powers to conduct investigations into breaches and requiring private companies to take steps to protect state secrets. Meanwhile, recent suspicious deaths of people held in residential surveillance at a designated location pending trial has revived public debate about abolishing the system.
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HRIC Weekly Brief
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China’s revised state secrets law would bar any official with access to confidential information from going abroad without approval, while also giving police broader powers to conduct investigations into breaches and requiring private companies to take steps to protect state secrets. Meanwhile, recent suspicious deaths of people held in residential surveillance at a designated location pending trial has revived public debate about abolishing the system.