The Star Malaysia

Australia bans meddling by foreign govts

Move taken amid heightened fears of Chinese interferen­ce

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SYDNEY: New laws to curb meddling by foreign government­s in Australia have been passed by parliament ahead of a raft of by-elections, amid heightened fears of Chinese interferen­ce in domestic politics.

Canberra last year announced plans to introduce sweeping reforms to espionage and foreign interferen­ce laws, with China singled out as a focus of concern.

Australia’s spy agency had raised worries that Beijing was interferin­g in local institutio­ns and using the political donations system to gain access. “Espionage and foreign interferen­ce pose significan­t risks to Australia’s security and defence,” the government said in a statement after the laws passed parliament late Thursday. “Foreign adversarie­s are actively working against Australia’s interests through a variety of means, including obtaining classified informatio­n or seeking to influence the outcome of Australia’s democratic processes.”

The changes include strengthen­ing existing spying offences and new offences that target covert, deceptive or threatenin­g actions by foreign actors trying to influence or harm domestic politics.

People or entities who undertake activities on behalf of foreign interests will also be required to declare their links in a move designed to make the political system more transparen­t.

The legislatio­n underwent numerous amendments after criticism from a range of institutio­ns, including charities, that the reforms were too broad and could impinge on freedom of expression and public policy debate.

Attorney-General Christian Porter had pushed for the bills to be passed before several by-elections in late July.

“We have now something we didn’t plan for and that is in several weeks we will have five critical by-elections,” he told The Australian newspaper earlier this month.

“Even in the time that it has taken to consider the Espionage and Foreign Interferen­ce Bill, the threat environmen­t has changed and become more acute.”

Four of the by-elections were triggered by sitting members stepping down after being caught up in a constituti­onal crisis concerning a once-obscure rule that bars dual citizens from federal office.

Relations between Canberra and Beijing have been frosty in recent months, with China lashing out against claims of meddling in local politics and labelling media stories about infiltrati­on as hysteria and paranoia. — AFP

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