The Borneo Post

China slams Australia amid growing foreign interferen­ce fears

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SYDNEY: Beijing accused Australia yesterday of stirring ‘anti- China hysteria’ after Canberra proposed a suite of foreign interferen­ce laws, labelling comments by some government officials as irresponsi­ble.

Prime Minister Malcom Turnbull on Tuesday announced wide-ranging reforms to tackle rising concerns of foreign interferen­ce, noting ‘disturbing reports’ about Chinese influence.

That came after Turnbull ordered an inquiry in June in the wake of 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 Chinese embassy in Canberra issued a furious response to the proposed laws Wednesday, saying Australian media had ‘repeatedly fabricated’ stories about ‘so- called’ Chinese infiltrati­on in Australia.

“Those reports, which were made up out of thin air and filled with cold war mentality and ideologica­l bias, reflected a typical anti- China hysteria and (are) paranoid,” an embassy spokespers­on said in a statement.

Rhetoric has escalated from inside Canberra over the past week, after a key Australian labor MP, Sam Dastyari, was forced to resign as deputy opposition whip after reports that he told a Chinese businessma­n his phone was likely being tapped by intelligen­ce agencies.

The June probe 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’.

There have also been mounting concerns within Australian universiti­es about Beijing’s use of nationalis­t student groups to monitor Chinese students, and challenge academics whose views do not align with Communist Party doctrine.

The embassy said these reports ‘ unscrupulo­usly vilified’ the Chinese community in Australia with ‘racial prejudice’. — AFP

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