Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Australia passes bills targeting foreign interferen­ce

Foreign interferen­ce in the latest U.S. and French presidenti­al elections plus Britain’s referendum to leave the European Union have been cited as justificat­ions for the changes.

- ROD MCGUIRK

CANBERRA, Australia — Australia’s Parliament passed national security legislatio­n Thursday that bans covert foreign interferen­ce in domestic politics, makes industrial espionage for a foreign power a crime and offends the nation’s most important trading partner, China.

The two bills covering foreign interferen­ce, espionage and influence transparen­cy have been criticized as criminaliz­ing dissent. The Senate made them law with the support of the center-left Labor Party opposition on the last day of Parliament before mid-August.

The conservati­ve government says the legislatio­n, first proposed in December, is the major cause of a rift in diplomatic relations with China. But the government maintains that it is not aimed at any particular country.

Foreign interferen­ce in the latest U. S. and French presidenti­al elections plus Britain’s referendum to leave the European Union have been cited as justificat­ions for the changes.

Individual­s lobbying for foreign government­s will have to be listed on a public register in a step toward making foreign influence on Australian politics more transparen­t.

Attorney General Christian Porter said Australia’s national security has been substantia­lly enhanced by the new protection­s against agents who could undermine Australia’s democratic institutio­ns and processes.

“We have heard time and time again from our most senior national security leaders that we live in a time of unpreceden­ted foreign intelligen­ce activity against Australia with more foreign agents, from more foreign powers, using more tradecraft to engage in espionage and foreign interferen­ce than at any time since the Cold War,” Porter said in a statement.

“This sends a strong message to those who would seek to undermine our way of life that Australia is acutely aware of activities against our national security and will continue to take the steps necessary to thwart their activities,” he added.

The law includes 38 new crimes and broadens the definition­s of existing crimes. The new crimes include stealing trade secrets on behalf of a foreign government, which is punishable by 15 years in prison.

A person who engages in covert or deceptive activity to influence political or government­al process, such as organizing a rally, without revealing he was operating on behalf of a foreign government could be guilty of a range of foreign interferen­ce crimes with maximum penalties ranging from 10-20 years in prison.

Both bills were substantia­lly amended in recent weeks on the advice of a parliament­ary committee that scrutinize­d them, narrowing their focus and reach, and increasing the number of organizati­ons that are exempt.

Charities that accept foreign funding but not foreign government direction are exempt, the Catholic Church will not have to register as an agent of the Vatican, and the media have legal protection­s in reporting leaked national security informatio­n.

The minor Greens party opposed the bills, arguing that they curtail press freedom, the right to protest and the work of non-government organizati­ons.

“This is a sad day for Australia. We’ve taken giant steps today down a dangerous path for our country,” Greens Sen. Nick McKim told Parliament.

Australian media have reported that the bills were the result of a classified government report commission­ed by Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull in 2016 that found the Chinese Communist Party had tried to influence Australian policy, compromise political parties and gain access to all levels of government for a decade. The government won’t comment on the media reports.

China protested Turnbull’s announceme­nt of the foreign interferen­ce ban.

The Chinese foreign ministry said in December that Turnbull’s remarks were prejudiced against China and had poisoned the atmosphere of China-Australia relations.

A related bill announced in December to ban foreign political donations, of which China has been the largest source, is still being drafted. Labor has voluntaril­y refused to accept foreign donations.

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