The Fiji Times

Minister: China behaving inconsiste­ntly

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SYDNEY – A senior Australian government minister said on Friday China was behaving in a way that was inconsiste­nt with Australian values by targeting political parties and universiti­es in Australia, drawing a sharp rebuke from China’s embassy.

Relations between the important trading partners have deteriorat­ed in recent years amid accusation­s that China is meddling in Australian domestic affairs and Australian fears that China is seeking undue influence in the Pacific region.

Australian lawmakers had sought to improve the relationsh­ip by refraining from public criticism of China but Peter Dutton, the minister for home affairs, said Australia would not be silent despite their commercial relations.

China is Australia’s largest trading partner, with bilateral trade worth more than $A180 billion ($F268.99b) last year.

“We have a very important trading relationsh­ip with China – incredibly important,” Mr Dutton told reporters in Canberra.

“But we are not going to allow university students to be unduly influenced, we are not going to allow theft of intellectu­al property, and we are not going to allow our government bodies or non-government bodies to be hacked into,” he said.

China’s embassy in Canberra called the remarks “irrational, shocking and baseless” in a statement on its website, adding that they constitute­d “an outright provocatio­n to the Chinese people”.

“Such ridiculous rhetoric severely harms the mutual trust between China and Australia and betrays the common interests of the two peoples,” the embassy said.

China has previously denied any improper activities, accusing Australia of adopting a “Cold War mentality”.

Reuters reported this month that Australian intelligen­ce had determined China was responsibl­e for a cyberattac­k on the national parliament and three largest political parties before a general election in May, according to five people with direct knowledge of the matter.

China’s foreign ministry denied involvemen­t in any hacking attacks and said the internet was full of theories that were hard to trace.

The attack on Australia’s parliament and political parties came as hackers were also targeting its most prestigiou­s university, an official report by the Australian National University (ANU) showed, which stoked fears that China could influence research and students.

The ANU said last week its investigat­ors were unable to identify who was responsibl­e for the cyberattac­k.

Foreign students are worth about $A35b ($F52.3b) a year to the Australian economy, with Chinese students accounting for about a third of that figure.

Australian universiti­es are financiall­y dependent on overseas students, raising fears that foreign government­s could exert undue influence.

As a result, Australian universiti­es will now be required to work with security agencies to ensure they guard against undue foreign interferen­ce.

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? Peter Dutton.
Picture: REUTERS Peter Dutton.

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