LONDON — Britain's government on Tuesday approved a huge new Chinese Embassy in central London despite heavy pressure from lawmakers across the political spectrum over its potential security risks.
Local Government Secretary Steve Reed formally signed off on plans for the building near the Tower of London after years of delays and legal challenges.
Critics have long expressed concerns that the supersized embassy, set to be the biggest Chinese Embassy in Europe, will be used as a base for espionage as well as pose a heightened threat of surveillance and intimidation of Chinese dissidents in exile.
But the government said it had worked ''with policing, and other relevant partners, to ensure that the breadth of national security issues associated with this planning application have been considered and addressed."
Plans for the embassy have been plagued by objections and protests since 2018, when China's government bought the site at Royal Mint Court, where Britain's money was once made, for 225 million pounds ($301 million.)
Opponents say the huge site sits too close to underground fiber optic cables carrying sensitive financial information between London's two main financial districts. British media have reported that the 20,000 square meter (215,278 square feet) complex would include 208 secret basement rooms close to the data cables.
Fears the embassy will be used to monitor activists
Dissidents have been among those who have protested the plans, saying a mega-embassy housing large numbers of officials would further China's repression of activists abroad.