The Post

Lawmaker investigat­ed

-

An Australian state lawmaker said yesterday that he was not a suspect in a police investigat­ion into unnamed people advancing China’s goals in Australia, days after his home and office were searched by police.

Shaoquett Moselmane, a member of the opposition Labor Party from

New South Wales, said he was told the investigat­ion was looking into other people suspected of working with China and he denied any wrongdoing.

‘‘I have never jeopardize­d the welfare of our country and our people,’’ he told a news conference.

Police have not said why they searched Moselmane’s Sydney home on Friday and also executed a warrant for his parliament­ary offices.

Australia has accused China of seeking to interfere in its domestic politics, allegation­s that have strained relations and led Australia in 2018 to pass new national security laws that outlaw covert foreign interferen­ce in domestic politics and make industrial espionage for a foreign power a crime.

Moselmane said yesterday that he would cooperate with Australian Federal Police in their investigat­ion but also exercise his right to remain silent. Moselmane denied media reports that he had accepted Chinese government-funded trips to China.

In April, he stood down as assistant president of the New South Wales upper house after praising Chinese President Xi Jinping’s response to the coronaviru­s pandemic. He said Xi had demonstrat­ed ‘‘unswerving leadership’’ and decisivene­ss.

Moselmane said yesterday that his views on China’s handling of the pandemic were consistent with those of the US president and World Health Organizati­on.

The Chinese Communist Party-controlled Global Times newspaper yesterday accused Australia of ‘‘waging an intensifyi­ng espionage campaign against China’’.

 ??  ?? Shaoquett Moselmane
Shaoquett Moselmane

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand