The Borneo Post

New Australia laws to deal with foreign political meddling

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SYDNEY: Foreign interferen­ce in Australian politics has become a ‘serious problem’, a top official said yesterday, with tougher laws on espionage and overseas donations to be introduced to parliament.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull ordered an inquiry in June after media revelation­s that the nation’s spy agency had warned the country’s political elite two years ago about taking donations from two billionair­es with links to the Chinese Communist Party.

The probe, by the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n and Fairfax Media, said that despite being cautioned, both the Liberals and Labor continued accepting substantia­l sums of cash.

It said intelligen­ce agencies had major concerns that China was interferin­g in Australian institutio­ns and using the political donations system to gain access. Beijing denied the allegation­s as ‘totally groundless’.

Since then concern over foreign interferen­ce has gathered momentum, heightened by ongoing revelation­s of Russian meddling in the American political system.

“The issue of foreign interferen­ce in our politics is an extremely serious problem,” Attorney-General George Brandis told parliament on Monday.

“So I can tell the Senate that later this week, the government will introduce a milestone legislativ­e package to reform Australia’s espionage and foreign interferen­ce legislatio­n.”

He said the new laws would strengthen and modernise a range of offences “for the purposes of investigat­ing, disrupting and prosecutin­g acts of espionage and covert interferen­ce in the Australian political process”.

There would be a new transparen­cy scheme, providing “visibility of the nature and extent of inf luence over Australia’s government and political processes by foreign interests”.

“It will introduce new offences targeting foreign interferen­ce and economic espionage, including offences that criminalis­e covert and deceptive activities that support the intelligen­ce activities of foreign actors,” he added.

A Chinese foreign ministry spokesman said in response yesterday that Beijing “always stays committed to following the principle of mutual respect for sovereignt­y and non-interferen­ce in the internal affairs” of other countries.

“At the same time we urge the relevant people on the Australian side to abandon prejudices,” Geng Shuang told a regular press briefing. — AFP

 ??  ?? Malcolm Turnbull
Malcolm Turnbull

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