The Star Malaysia

Australia to ban foreign influence

Interferen­ce to be outlawed as treason

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We must ensure that our politics and our Parliament are strong enough to withstand attempts by foreign powers to interfere or influence. Malcolm Turnbull

Sydney: Australia will ban foreign interferen­ce in its politics – either through espionage or financial donations – in a move motivated largely by Russia’s alleged involvemen­t in last year’s US election and China’s growing influence on the global political landscape.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said yesterday that foreign interferen­ce in politics would be outlawed under updated treason and espionage laws. The announceme­nt comes as a US investigat­ion into alleged election meddling by Russia continues, and follows Obama administra­tion concerns about Chinese money and influence in Australian politics.

“Foreign powers are making unpreceden­ted and increasing­ly sophistica­ted attempts to influence the political process, both here and abroad,” Turnbull told reporters in Canberra.

Under the new laws, it will be a crime for a person to engage in conduct on behalf of a foreign principal that will influence a political or government­al process, including opposition party policy, and is either covert or involves deception.

The foreign influence and interferen­ce package will be complement­ed by another Bill on electoral reform that will ban foreign political donations, Turnbull said.

“We must ensure that our politics and our Parliament are strong enough to withstand attempts by foreign powers to interfere or influence,” he added in a statement.

The laws would criminalis­e acts such as Labour Party Senator Sam Dastyari’s soliciting of a donation from a Chinese businessma­n, which got Dastyari demoted to the opposition backbench last week.

Dastyari has been dubbed “Shanghai Sam” for his dealings with Chinese Communist Party-linked businessma­n Huang Xiangmo.

Attorney-General George Brandis said the fact that Dastyari’s conduct had not breached any laws showed a need for a review.

“That is why we are introducin­g, because of the gap in those laws, a new offense of unlawful foreign interferen­ce,” Brandis said.

Under the new laws, the offence of espionage will cover not only the passing on of informatio­n, but possessing and receiving it as well. There will also be a new offense that will criminalis­e soliciting or procuring a person to engage in espionage, and a new “preparatio­n and planning” offence.

Turnbull said the reforms would “reshape the way our national security agencies investigat­e and disrupt” foreign interferen­ce and espionage and would protect the Australian way of life.

“They will strengthen our democracy and will ensure that decisions are made based on Australia’s national interest, not anyone else’s,” he said in a statement.

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