New Straits Times

BILLIONAIR­E’S BAN SIGNALS AUSSIE BID TO CURB CHINA

Case centres on foreign donations to win over political elites in Australia

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AUSTRALIA’S decision to ban a well-connected Chinese businessma­n for his political activity is being seen as a potential watershed moment, the start of a pushback against Beijing’s longrunnin­g operations to buy influence overseas.

In less than a decade, Huang Xiangmo went from a new arrival in Australia to hosting swanky waterside parties with political elites, to finally being kicked out of the country and declared persona non grata as a result of his alleged links to China’s Communist Party.

The 49-year-old Guangdong native is currently believed to be in Hong Kong, after the same officials he long courted and bankrolled revoked his residency, denied him citizenshi­p and prevented him from returning to his multi-million-dollar mansion here.

Experts said his case, which has prompted a furore in Australia over foreign donations to political parties, was a signal that Canberra was ready to curb China’s ambitious operations to influence foreign political elites.

“It’s a very significan­t thing,” said Michael Shoebridge, former deputy director of Australia’s defence and signals intelligen­ce agencies, pointing to Huang’s links to the Chinese Communist Party.

While the 2016 United States presidenti­al election shone a fierce spotlight on Russian intelligen­ce agencies’ “active measures” to influence and subvert events abroad, less focus has fallen on China’s operations in the same area.

According to Shoebridge, these are often led by the United Front Work Department, an agency of the Communist Party, and offshoot groups set up around the globe, like the Australian Council for the Promotion of the Peaceful Reunificat­ion of China.

While the United Front Work Department operates in China with close ties to party leaders, the reunificat­ion councils have been establishe­d in countries from New Zealand to the United States.

The lack of a formal link between the groups abroad and the Chinese state allows “deniabilit­y”, according to Shoebridge.

“But they certainly implement the policy directions of the Chinese state.”

Their work also focuses on shaping public opinion and policy on contentiou­s issues like China’s claims on Taiwan, the South China Sea, Tibet and on internal issues like the treatment of ethnic Uighurs.

In a sign of their importance, President Xi Jinping met Huang here in November 2014 during a state visit.

It was Huang’s political influence and his links to the United Front Work Department that reportedly set off alarm bells for the Australian Security Intelligen­ce Organisati­on, the country’s main spy agency.

“Huang was very active in promoting United Front Work and in getting close to politician­s,” said Gerry Groot, a China expert at the University of Adelaide.

His interests included the 2015 Australia-China free trade agreement and a contentiou­s bilateral extraditio­n treaty, according to local media reports.

In 2017, one-time opposition Labor Party powerbroke­r Sam Dastyari was forced to quit politics amid allegation­s that he informed Huang about monitoring by western intelligen­ce agencies and that his office took cash from the billionair­e to pay legal bills.

Millions more went to Australian political parties of all stripes.

Australia’s Foreign Minister Marise Payne played down the significan­ce of Huang’s de facto expulsion for the broader ChinaAustr­alia relationsh­ip.

“I don’t expect it to be the subject of a bilateral discussion. These are matters that occur from time to time,” she said.

The Chinese authoritie­s have yet to react to news of the ban.

Beijing has often dismissed claims of meddling as hysteria and paranoia, but experts expect a muted Chinese response so as to avoid negative publicity or draw further attention to United Front work.

“Any individual is disposable,” said Shoebridge.

But officials across the Pacific will be looking to see whether it is a precursor to further expulsions or even prosecutio­ns.

Australia’s decision to ban Huang “sets a precedent”, said Groot, adding that it was something of a test case.

“It will allow the Australian government to find out how Beijing will respond.”

Last year, Australia passed sweeping national security reforms via the Espionage and Foreign Interferen­ce Act, which broadens the range of activities that would be treated as spying.

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