The Guardian Australia

'Malicious slander': China outraged by claim its consular officials infiltrate­d Australia politics

- Daniel Hurst

China’s foreign ministry has hit back at the “malicious slander” that its consular officials in Australia may have been involved in infiltrati­ng domestic politics, after reports some officials were named in warrants in connection with a foreign interferen­ce investigat­ion.

Amid worsening diplomatic tensions, a foreign ministry spokespers­on also accused some unnamed people in Australia of “doing whatever they can to fan up anti-China sentiments and catch eyeballs by smearing and attacking China, which only poisons China-Australia relations”.

The latest barrage of criticism follows reports Australian authoritie­s may have accessed a New South Wales political staffer’s communicat­ions with Chinese diplomats and consular officials in Australia as part of a foreign interferen­ce investigat­ion.

The joint investigat­ion by spy agency Asio and the Australian federal police became public in late June when officers raided the property of the NSW upper house Labor MP Shaoquett Moselmane, who denies wrongdoing.

Australian authoritie­s are investigat­ing whether John Zhang, a parttime staffer to Moselmane, and others used “a private social media chat group and other fora” with the MP in order to “advance the interests and policy goals” of the Chinese government in Australia, according to documents submitted to the high court.

Zhang, who also denies wrongdoing, has launched a legal challenge against the validity of the warrants that were used to search his property in late June.

According to an ABC report, Zhang has written to senior Australian ministers complainin­g that investigat­ors had accessed his communicat­ions with Chinese

diplomats and consular officials in Australia.

He has reportedly questioned how this complies with the protection­s afforded to the communicat­ions of diplomatic officials and their families.

A Chinese foreign ministry spokespers­on, Wang Wenbin, said the Chinese diplomatic missions in Australia had been “observing internatio­nal law and basic norms governing internatio­nal relations”.

He said people should “stop politicisi­ng or stigmatisi­ng the normal fulfilment of duty by Chinese diplomatic missions in Australia”. Attempts to fan anti-China sentiments, he said, were “a despicable practice that does no good to bilateral ties”.

“Certain media’s claim of ‘the consulate general and its officials are involved in infiltrati­on’ is just a malicious slander. China deplores and strongly opposes that,” he said at a regular press conference.

“We have never conducted and will never conduct any interferen­ce or infiltrati­on against another country. This is not in our genes.”

The Global Times, a Chinese state media outlet, published an article condemning the alleged intercepti­on of diplomatic communicat­ions as “a ‘stupid’ and ‘vicious’ move”.

Australia’s trade minister, Simon Birmingham, played down the reported consular links to the investigat­ion, saying intelligen­ce agencies and police acted “in accordance with Australian law, and Australian law respects internatio­nal laws and norms”.

Birmingham said his understand­ing was that the investigat­ions “relate very much to potential foreign interferen­ce activities by publicised figures, who have been identified in the media, who are Australian­s”.

“Our approach is purely to uphold the laws of Australia and they include bipartisan foreign interferen­ce laws that are designed to protect our democracy, protect our systems of government from undue interferen­ce, wherever it may come from,” Birmingham told the ABC.

The Australian government has been mostly tight-lipped about the conduct of the foreign interferen­ce investigat­ion, which has also been linked to the questionin­g of several Chinese journalist­s in June and the cancellati­on of two Chinese scholars’ visas.

But the attorney general, Christian Porter, argued last week that there would be “few nations on earth where the rule of law is more stringentl­y observed” in the way that warrants were issued.

Diplomatic tensions have also flared this week over comments by

Australia’s foreign affairs minister, Marise Payne, criticisin­g the Chinese government over its human rights record.

In a speech to the UN’s human rights council, Payne said more needed to be done to address a range of human rights issues, “including concerning reports of repressive measures enforced against Uighurs and other ethnic minorities in Xinjiang”.

Payne also cited “legislatio­n related to national security on Hong Kong, which has eroded rights and freedom guaranteed to the people on Hong Kong”.

Hua Chunying, a foreign ministry spokespers­on, tweeted late on Wednesday that Payne was “lashing out” at China without understand­ing “the real situation in Xinjiang”.

The comments come amid increasing tensions in the relationsh­ip between Australia and its largest trading partner, with the government in Canberra insisting it will not hold back in expressing its values even in the face of economic pressure.

Two Australian journalist­s – the ABC’s Bill Birtles and the Australian Financial Review’s Michael Smith – returned to Australia early last week after being quizzed by Chinese security services and after a diplomatic standoff over an initial ban on their exit from the country.

It followed confirmati­on that Cheng Lei, an Australian citizen and business journalist for the Chinese state broadcaste­r CGTN, was taken into secretive detention in China in mid-August over an investigat­ion that Beijing has said relates to national security.

Dozens of people, including Chinese Australian­s, say they have been victims of Chinese Communist party intimidati­on in Australia, according to a policy paper published by the China Matters thinktank on Thursday, but few report it to authoritie­s.

The paper cited several reasons that people were reluctant to formally report such cases, including a belief that the Australian government could not protect the victim’s family who remained in China or that “reporting would not change anything”.

 ?? Photograph: Thomas White/Reuters ?? A Chinese foreign ministry spokespers­on said ‘certain media’s claim of “the consulate general and its officials are involved in infiltrati­on” is just a malicious slander.
Photograph: Thomas White/Reuters A Chinese foreign ministry spokespers­on said ‘certain media’s claim of “the consulate general and its officials are involved in infiltrati­on” is just a malicious slander.

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