The Guardian Australia

Penny Wong calls on diplomats to explain Australia-China relationsh­ip

- Sarah Martin Chief political correspond­ent

Labor’s shadow foreign minister, Penny Wong, has called on diplomats to use their “soft power” to explain Australia’s complex relationsh­ip with China, saying a well-informed discussion is needed to protect against suspicion and xenophobia.

In a speech to Australia’s global heads of mission in Canberra on Tuesday, Wong said that while diplomats were charged with “explaining Australia to the world” there was a growing need to also share their knowledge and expertise domestical­ly.

“Perhaps this is most pressing when it comes to Australia’s relationsh­ip with China,” Wong said.

“China is, and will continue to be, of great importance to Australia, the region and the world. It is a relationsh­ip that is both complex and consequent­ial, and only getting more so.”

“The key question for Australia is: how do we best make the relationsh­ip work for us?”

Wong, who has called for the department of foreign affairs and office of national intelligen­ce to brief MPs on the China relationsh­ip, told diplomats that relevant agencies should determine the form and content of any briefing given to MPs, suggesting they could be similar to those already provided to the business community.

“I believe it would be very helpful for parliament­arians to better understand the points of convergenc­e in our relationsh­ip with China, and the points of divergence, and to understand how the Government is handling them,” she said.

“The discussion on China is happening anyway (and) it is in the interest of a sensible, calm and mature debate, and the hope of promoting a bipartisan approach to the relationsh­ip, that that discussion be well-informed.”

Wong said that Australian­s wanted to understand the relationsh­ip better, but it was particular­ly important and consequent­ial for the more than one million Australian­s who made up the Chinese diaspora.

“The implicatio­ns of how this discussion is handled in Australia is not esoteric – it has direct consequenc­e for the wellbeing of many of our fellow Australian­s, and we need to bear that in mind,” she said.

“We must not allow this current discussion to be tainted by xenophobia and suspicion.”

Arguing the relationsh­ip with China was often wrongly viewed as a binary – with China portrayed as either a threat or an opportunit­y, and Australia needing to side with one country over another, Wong said the diplomatic corps could help explain why this approach was often contrary to the national interest.

“The nuance that diplomacy brings to discussion has never been more important”.

Wong pointed to the importance of Australia’s engagement amid the growing tensions between the US and China, saying there was a risk of “becoming collateral.”

She also used the speech to cri

ticise the government for cuts to the aid budget and the decision to shut down the Australia Network and ABC shortwave radio transmissi­on in the Pacific, calling it “a triumph of ideology over interest.”

“In the current context of the Pacific Step-Up it really is an own goal.”

“Foreign affairs is an expression of identity as much as policy (and) without the lack of a fully-formed and allencompa­ssing soft power strategy, we can never fully maximise our influence.”

Australia’s relationsh­ip with China has become more politicall­y sensitive as the trade war between the US and China heats up, with several Coalition backbenche­rs urging the government to call out China’s authoritar­ianism.

Labor is also at the centre of a political storm in NSW over donations made by a banned Chinese billionair­e property developer, Huang Xiangmo, who was denied re-entry into Australia earlier this year amid concerns raised by security agencies.

In a meeting of Labor MPs on Tuesday, one caucus member asked about how Labor was managing the relationsh­ip, raising concern about the prime minister, Scott Morrison, referring to China as a “customer”.

Wong informed MPs that she had not yet heard from the foreign minister, Marise Payne, in response to her request for bipartisan parliament­ary briefings on the relationsh­ip.

 ?? Photograph: Tracey Nearmy/Getty Images ?? The shadow foreign minister, Penny Wong, has called for the use of “soft power” to explain the Australia-China relationsh­ip, as Labor deals
with the fall-out from secret donations made by a banned Chinese billionair­e.
Photograph: Tracey Nearmy/Getty Images The shadow foreign minister, Penny Wong, has called for the use of “soft power” to explain the Australia-China relationsh­ip, as Labor deals with the fall-out from secret donations made by a banned Chinese billionair­e.

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