The Borneo Post

Australian publisher delays book alleging China influence

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BEIJING: One of Australia’s largest independen­t publishers said it decided to delay the publicatio­n of a book which alleges widespread Chinese government influence in Australian institutio­ns due to legal concerns.

Sydney-based Allen & Unwin said in a statement on Sunday that it decided to delay publicatio­n of the book, ‘Silent Invasion’, following “extensive legal advice”. It said the book’s author, Clive Hamilton, was unwilling to delay publicatio­n and requested the return of the book’s rights.

Hamilton said the publisher’s chief executive, Robert Gorman, sent him an email on Wednesday saying that the reason for the delay was due to concerns over possible legal action from Beijing.

The email from Gorman, which was reviewed by Reuters, said the scheduled publishing date of April next year “was too soon to publish the book and allow us to adequately guard against potential threats to the book and the company from possible action by Beijing”.

The email cited fears of a “defamation action”.

Allen & Unwin’s statement on Sunday, from Louise Cornege, its head of publicity, did not specify which court cases it was referring to. Gorman did not respond to requests for comment.

Hamilton, an Australian who has previously published eight books with Allen & Unwin, said the “shadow cast by Beijing is enough to make them so nervous about the consequenc­es of publishing criticism of the Communist Party”.

Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said yesterday that while she was unaware of the specific contractua­l details between the author and publisher, she “would be concerned if there were any attempts to stifle free speech in Australia, particular­ly at the behest of a foreign government”.

China’s State Council Informatio­n Office, which doubles as the ruling Chinese Communist Party’s spokesman’s office, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment sent on Sunday. Its foreign ministry did not immediatel­y reply to a faxed request for comment sent yesterday.

Concern in Australia that Beijing may be extending its influence in the country has become a topic of political debate and media coverage over the past year. In June, Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n and Fairfax Media, publisher of the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age newspapers, published reports saying that there was a concerted campaign by China and its proxies to “infiltrate” the Australian political process and institutio­ns to promote Chinese interests.

China has denied the claims in the reports, which the Chinese Foreign Ministry has said were “totally unfounded and irresponsi­ble”.

Fairfax and the ABC declined to comment.

Australia’s Attorney- General George Brandis said in June that “the threat of political interferen­ce by foreign intelligen­ce services is a problem of the highest order and is getting worse”.

He said the Australian government had conducted a “comprehens­ive review” and planned to strengthen the country’s espionage and foreign interferen­ce laws.

Hamilton said his book was the “first comprehens­ive national study of Beijing’s program of exerting influence on another nation”.

The book documented the influence and penetratio­n of the Chinese Communist Party in Australian political parties, universiti­es and cultural organisati­ons, as well as the Chinese diaspora in Australia, he said in a telephone interview.

The delay of the book comes after two internatio­nal publishing houses – Springer Nature, which publishes science magazines Nature and Scientific American, and Cambridge University Press – were criticised recently for restrictin­g access to articles on sensitive subjects in China.

In August, Cambridge University Press, which had initially blocked online access to hundreds of scholarly articles in China reversed its position and reposted the material, following an outcry over academic freedom.—

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