The Star Malaysia

Australia seeks to mend China ties

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Sydney: Australia announced a diplomatic boost to “turbo-charge” its China relations as it seeks to mend ties damaged by foreign interferen­ce concerns and a 5G bar on Huawei.

Canberra unveiled plans for a new foundation to supercede the Australia-China Council, its longtime primary platform for relations with its largest trading partner.

The government also announced that career diplomat Graham Fletcher, a China expert and Mandarin speaker, would replace Jan Adams as Australia’s ambassador in Beijing. Adams had served in the role since 2016.

Foreign Minister Marise Payne said the new National Foundation for Australia-China Relations would receive A$44mil (RM127mil) over five years, significan­tly broadening the remit of its predecesso­r.

She said the more than 40-yearold Council had remained “static even as China has transforme­d and our bilateral ties have dramatical­ly expanded in breadth and complexity”.

She said the “substantia­lly increased” funding would allow the new body to “move beyond the Council’s current focus on education, culture and the arts, to also promote Australian excellence in areas such as agricultur­e, infrastruc­ture, health and ageing and the environmen­t and energy”.

“It will harness efforts of the private sector, peak bodies, NGOs, cultural organisati­ons, state and federal agencies and the ChineseAus­tralian community to turbo-charge our national effort in engaging China.”

While noting that the two countries “share common objectives” in many areas, Payne said there were “different perspectiv­es on some important issues” that would be a focus of the new foundation.

Bilateral ties have soured, notably since Canberra passed sweeping national security reforms last year to strengthen foreign interferen­ce laws, calling out China as its primary concern, and setting off a string of diplomatic flare-ups.

A high-profile Australian senator was forced to quit politics in 2017 over his links to Chinese billionair­e Huang Xiangmo, a permanent Australian resident who last month was banned from returning to the country following scrutiny of his Communist Party ties.

Beijing has dismissed the claims of political interferen­ce as paranoia and hysteria.

Australia last year also announced guidelines for contractor­s to build fifth-generation – or 5G – mobile networks that effectivel­y blocked Chinese telecom giant Huawei.

Canberra cited intelligen­ce agency warnings against using vendors subject to “extrajudic­ial directions from a foreign government”. — AFP

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