Chinese spy museum closed to foreigners

The director of the Jiangsu National Security Education museum in Nanjing, who would only give her name as Ms Qian, said the collection of tiny pistols, miniature cameras, and concealed wiretaps may be timeworn, but is still too sensitive for foreign eyes.

The director of the Jiangsu National Security Education museum in Nanjing, who would only give her name as Ms Qian, said the collection of tiny pistols, miniature cameras, and concealed wiretaps may be timeworn, but is still too sensitive for foreign eyes.

"We don't want such sensitive spy information to be exposed to foreigners, so they are not allowed to enter," she said.

"We have a range of documents and gadgets dating from 1927, when the Communist Party's Central Committee espionage department was founded, to the 1980s.

"We were ordered by the National Security bureau of Jiangsu province not to let foreigners see it."

No photography is allowed inside the museum either, she said.

However, the museum did reveal that it has exhibits including guns disguised as lipstick, hollowed-out coins used to conceal documents and maps hidden in decks of cards.

Fan Hong, a spokesman for the new Jiangsu National Security Education Centre, said of the museum: "It's for Chinese only.

"I am not sure about the exact reasons. I think it's because the museum is related to national security issues."

Chinese spies have recently been accused of using more hi-tech equipment, which they allegedly used for hacking into computer systems in the US and Europe. Such allegations have been dismissed as "lies" by the Chinese government.

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