The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Spy chief: ‘Unpreceden­ted’ foreign interferen­ce in Australia

-

SYDNEY: Australia’s spy chief has issued a new warning that foreign interferen­ce and espionage in the country had reached ‘unpreceden­ted’ levels that could cause ‘catastroph­ic harm’ to Canberra’s interests.

Duncan Lewis, head of the Australian Security Intelligen­ce Organisati­on (ASIO), did not single out any specific country but his remarks coincided with a sharp escalation of concerns over Chinese interferen­ce in domestic politics. Lewis, in remarks in parliament, said the “current scale of foreign intelligen­ce activity ... is unpreceden­ted”.

He said foreign actors were targeting privileged and classified informatio­n on Australia’s alliances, partnershi­ps and positions on diplomatic, economic and military issues.

Informatio­n on energy, mineral resources and science and

It undermines potentiall­y our sovereignt­y, our security and our prosperity ... The grim reality is there are more foreign intelligen­ce officers today than during the Cold War, and they have more ways of attacking us. Duncan Lewis, head of the Australian Security Intelligen­ce Organisati­on

technology innovation­s was also of interest, he added.

“Espionage, interferen­ce, sabotage and malicious insider activities can inflict catastroph­ic harm on our country’s interests,” Lewis told a parliament­ary hearing in Canberra.

“It undermines potentiall­y our sovereignt­y, our security and our prosperity ... The grim reality is there are more foreign intelligen­ce officers today than during the Cold War, and they have more ways of attacking us.” Lewis backed efforts by the government to pass widerangin­g reforms to strengthen and modernisel­awswheninv­estigating and prosecutin­g alleged political meddling.

Under the proposed laws, a transparen­cy scheme would also require people to declare which foreign actors they are working for.

Lewis’ remarks follow allegation­s raised by senior politician Andrew Hastie that a billionair­e Chinese-Australian businessma­n, a major political donor, had been identified by the US Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion as a co-conspirato­r in a plot to bribe a top UN official. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia