British Security Minister, Dan Jarvis, welcomed on Monday a court ruling affirming the Home Office’s stance on the exclusion of a person linked to the Chinese Communist Party.
“We welcome the court’s decision to uphold the Home Office’s position in regard to the exclusion of H6, who can now be named as Yang Tengbo,” said Jarvis during a parliament session.
The Chinese businessman with close links to Prince Andrew said he had done nothing wrong and was not a spy, after he was named in court as being a suspected Chinese agent by the British authorities.
Yang Tengbo, described in a ruling last week by the Special Immigration Appeals Commission (SIAC) as a “close confidant” of Andrew, waived his right to anonymity on Monday so he could respond to the accusation.
“I have done nothing wrong or unlawful, and the concerns raised by the Home Office against me are ill-founded,” he said in a statement released by his lawyer, referring to Britain’s interior ministry. “The widespread description of me as a ‘spy’ is entirely untrue.”
The 50-year-old, who had previously been granted anonymity in the SIAC proceedings, was removed from a flight from Beijing to London in February 2023 and told that Britain intended to ban him from the country. This happened the following month on national security grounds.
Yang appealed against the ban at the Special Immigration Appeals Commission, which rejected his case in a written ruling last Thursday—the first time the reported relationship had come to light.
Britain’s Home Office told Yang they had reason to believe he was “engaging, or had previously engaged, in covert and deceptive activity on behalf of the United Front Work Department (UFWD) which is an arm of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) state apparatus,” in a July 2023 letter quoted in SIAC’s ruling.
The Home Office said it believed Yang was “likely to pose a threat to UK national security.”
Yang’s lawyer, Guy Vassall-Adams, told the High Court on Monday that his client had waived his right to anonymity to make a statement, and the judge, Martin Chamberlain, agreed.
On Friday Andrew, the younger brother of King Charles, issued a statement to the BBC and other media in which he said he had “ceased all contact” with the individual once concerns were raised.
The ruling said evidence obtained from Yang’s phone showed Andrew had authorized him to set up an international financial initiative to engage with potential partners and investors in China. The ruling did not say what the fund was intended for.
Reuters contacted Andrew’s office for further comment but did not receive an immediate response.
A spokesperson at the Chinese Foreign Ministry denied the accusations on Monday.