The Asian Age

Australia passes foreign interferen­ce laws

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Canberra, June 28: Australia's Parliament on Thursday passed a package of new laws aimed at preventing foreign interferen­ce in the country, BBC reported.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull announced the crackdown last December.

Although he denied it was aimed specifical­ly at China, the move has added to diplomatic tensions with Beijing in recent months.

The wide- ranging laws, approved in the Senate on Thursday, target foreign interferen­ce in politics and affairs,

Among key provisions, they will require lobbyists for foreign government­s to identify themselves on a public register.

In December, other as well domestic as espionage. Mr Turnbull said the crackdown followed warnings by intelligen­ce agencies that were "necessaril­y classified".

"Foreign powers are making unpreceden­ted and increasing­ly sophistica­ted attempts to influence the political process, both here and abroad," he said at the time.

He later acknowledg­ed "disturbing reports about Chinese influence", an assertion that has been strongly denied by Beijing.

Last week ambassador to China's Australia, Cheng Jingye, reiterated his warning that a "Cold War mentality" was underminin­g relations.

The government has described the laws as the most significan­t counteresp­ionage reforms in Australia since the 1970s.

They were approved following months of review by a parliament­ary national security committee. The laws criminalis­e covert, deceptive or threatenin­g actions that are intended to interfere with democratic processes or provide intelligen­ce to overseas government­s.

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