The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australian journalist arrested in China for ‘supplying state secrets’

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SYDNEY: An Australian journalist who disappeare­d from Chinese state television’s airwaves six months ago and was detained by Beijing authoritie­s has been formally arrested for “supplying state secrets overseas”.

Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne said Monday that China had revealed it formally arrested Cheng Lei on Feb 5, after taking her into custody last August without explanatio­n.

The mother-of-two stands accused of “illegally supplying state secrets overseas”, Payne said in a statement, without providing details.

Cheng had been a familiar face on CGTN’s English-language channel, conducting interviews with noted CEOs from around the world.

Born in Hunan province, she emigrated to Australia as a child, before returning to China and joining the state broadcaste­r in 2012.

She now faces severe punishment if found to have broken China’s national security laws.

Her niece Louisa Wen told Australian broadcaste­r ABC that the family did not “understand anything about the case”.

Cheng’s 11-year-old daughter and nine-year-old son “don’t fully understand the situation”, she said, adding that it had been “quite tough on the kids wondering what’s going on”.

Cheng’s detention came as relations between Australia and China cratered.

The timing and lack of informatio­n about charges raised speculatio­n that her detention was politicall­y motivated, or titfor-tat retaliatio­n.

Beijing has reacted angrily to Australia’s liberal use of foreign interferen­ce laws to block Chinese investment­s in sensitive sectors and to investigat­e Chinese influence on the country’s public life.

China was also infuriated by Australia’s calls for an independen­t probe into the origins of the coronaviru­s pandemic, responding with a slew of sanctions against Australian exports.

Cheng’s detention came weeks after Australian authoritie­s raided the homes of Chinese state media journalist­s.

Two Australian journalist­s, Bill Birtles and Michael Smith, fled China shortly after being interrogat­ed about Cheng.

Payne said the Australian government had visited Cheng six times since she was detained – most recently on Jan 27 – and had “serious concerns” about her “welfare and conditions of detention”.

“We expect basic standards of justice, procedural fairness and humane treatment to be met, in accordance with internatio­nal norms,” she said.

Cheng was the second highprofil­e Australian citizen to be held in Beijing, after writer Yang Hengjun was arrested in January 2019 on suspicion of espionage.

Her detention sent shockwaves through China’s foreign journalist community.

She had written a number of Facebook posts critical of Chinese President Xi Jinping and Beijing’s approach to the coronaviru­s outbreak.

 ??  ?? Members of the Indo-Tibetan Border Police during a rescue operation after a broken glacier caused a major river surge that swept away bridges and roads, at a tunnel near Tapovan dam in Chamoli district of Uttarakhan­d.
Members of the Indo-Tibetan Border Police during a rescue operation after a broken glacier caused a major river surge that swept away bridges and roads, at a tunnel near Tapovan dam in Chamoli district of Uttarakhan­d.
 ??  ?? Cheng Le
Cheng Le

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