The Star Malaysia

Aussie PM: There is tension with China but no ‘deep chill’

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SYDNEY: Australia’s prime minister admitted bubbling tensions with China over allegation­s of Beijing meddling in domestic politics, but denied there was a “deep chill” in relations after reports ministers were being refused visas.

Bilateral ties took a dive late last year when Canberra announced wide-ranging reforms to espionage and foreign interferen­ce legislatio­n, singling out China as a focus of concern.

It sparked a furious response from Beijing, which summoned Australia’s ambassador and attacked local media stories about infiltrati­on, describing them as fabricatio­ns based on hysteria and paranoia.

The ice has yet to thaw, with another spat in January prompting Beijing to lodge a formal diplomatic protest after an Australian minister called Chinese infrastruc­ture pro- jects in the Pacific “white elephants”.

The Australian Financial Review said yesterday China’s leadership was so incensed by Canberra’s rhetoric that it was regularly refusing visas to ministers and a major annual showcase of Australian trade and business in China looked certain to be abandoned this year.

The newspaper characteri­sed it as a deep chill with the country’s top trading partner, but Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull was keen to play the story down.

“There has certainly has been a degree of tension in the relationsh­ip that has arisen because of criticism in China about our foreign interferen­ce laws,” he told the radio station 3AW in Melbourne.

“All I would say is there has clearly been some misunderst­andings of our foreign interferen­ce legislatio­n in the Chinese media.” — AFP

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