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China raps Obama over spying after anti-terror law row

Beijing on Tuesday pushed back at the US over espionage concerns, after President Barack Obama criticised a Chinese anti-terror measure that would force tech firms to surrender key information to Communist authorities.

The new counter-terrorism law, recently drafted by Chinese lawmakers and expected to be adopted this year, would require technology companies to give Beijing details of their encryption methods or be denied access to the Chinese market.

It has alarmed some US-based tech companies and on Monday drew criticism from Obama, who said he had raised the issue directly with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

"We have made it very clear to them that this is something they are going to have to change if they are to do business with the United States," Obama told Reuters in Washington.

China operates a vast security and surveillance apparatus, with the Communist Party maintaining a resolute grip on power, while Washington and Beijing frequently trade accusations of state-sponsored cyber-spying.

Beijing's foreign ministry defended the law as purely internal and "a requirement for the Chinese government to prevent and combat terrorism".

"The legislation is China's domestic affair," spokeswoman Hua Chunying said at a regular news conference, calling on Washington to "view it in a correct and objective way".

She also noted that "not too long ago, it was disclosed that some country embedded spying software for surveillance in SIM card cardmakers".

The statement was an apparent reference to reports last month that European SIM maker Gemalto had suffered hacking attacks believed to have been conducted by US and British intelligence agencies.

"All countries are paying close attention to that and are taking measures to secure their own information security; this is beyond reproach," Hua said, adding that China "opposes using information technology superiority or the convenience of supplying information technology products to conduct cyber-surveillance".

Washington last May charged five Chinese military officers with breaking into US computers for industrial espionage purposes.

China denied the charges and soon afterwards angrily suspended a newly-formed cyber-security working group.

Beijing is tightening its grip on information after a series of deadly attacks which authorities have blamed on separatists from the far-western, mainly Muslim region of Xinjiang.

Also included in the draft anti-terror law is a new definition of "terrorism" that rights groups say is too broad and would grant the Chinese government licence to commit a raft of abuses.