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Crime

Taiwan arrests BASF staff for selling secrets to China

January 7, 2019

Taiwan police have arrested at least six people for passing trade secrets to a Chinese company. Beijing has come under increased criticism for failing to stop intellectual property theft.

https://p.dw.com/p/3B9bq
Smoke rises from a chimney at the BASF chemical company in Leverkusen
Image: picture-alliance/M. Probst

Taiwanese authorities on Monday announced they had arrested six current and former employees of German chemicals giant BASF for passing trade secrets to a Chinese company.

The Taiwan Criminal Investigation Bureau (CIB) said engineers were involved in a plot "to leak crucial technology and manufacturing processes … to make illegal profits."

The engineers had received at least $1.3 million (€1.1 million) out of nearly $6 million offered by China-based Jiangyin Jianghua Microelectronics Materials Co., said CIB director Lu Sung Hao.

Read more: China's road from copycat to innovator

Trade secrets for sale

The engineers, including at least one senior manager, are suspected of selling the Jiangsu-based company electronic manufacturing processes to build a chemicals plant in mainland China.

BASF said that only one of the engineers arrested in Taiwan was still an employee and that their contract had been suspended for now.

"We have taken immediate steps to support the investigation led by local law enforcement officials and protect the relevant information," said BASF.

Read more: Watches and shoes among most counterfeited products in EU

BASF logo
BASF said it is working with Taiwanese authorities to determine how much information was passed on to the Chinese companyImage: picture-alliance/A. Pohl

Intellectual property theft

China has come under increased scrutiny for alleged intellectual property theft.

US President Donald Trump imposed some $50 billion worth of tariffs over intellectual property theft, which the US government says results in up to $600 billion in losses annually.

In Germany, officials have also expressed concerns. German prosecutors in November announced they would charge a former employee of Cologne-based chemicals maker Lanxess for stealing trade secrets in hopes of setting up a copycat reactor in China.

Read more: US bans sales to Chinese chipmaker Fujian Jinhua as tariffs escalation beckons

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ls/rt (Reuters, AFP)