The New Zealand Herald

Australian spy agency set to get a funding boost

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Australia is promising an unpreceden­ted funding increase for its main spy agency, which is struggling to meet demands posed by the nation’s new foreign interferen­ce laws, espionage and terrorism.

Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton promised more money and staff a day after the Australian Security intelligen­ce Organisati­on, better known as Asio, revealed in an annual report an “increasing gap between demand for our counter-espionage and foreign interferen­ce advice and our ability to furnish this assistance”. “It’s getting unpreceden­ted funding and we’ll continue to support,” Dutton told reporters.

“We have more demands on our intelligen­ce services and law enforcemen­t agencies than ever before,” he added.

Australia last year outlawed covert foreign interferen­ce in world-first legislatio­n that has angered China, its biggest export market.

Since December, individual­s and businesses that are attempting to influence the Government and Australian politics on behalf of a foreign government have had to register, a requiremen­t meant to add transparen­cy for the public and government decisionma­kers.

The public register is a response to a government-commission­ed classified report that found the Chinese Communist Party for a decade had tried to influence Australian policy, compromise political parties and gain access to all levels of government. There have been no public reports of anyone being charged with breaching the legislatio­n by attempting to covertly influence government.

Dutton said whether individual­s were charged was a matter for police.

The Asio report said the passage of new laws on foreign interferen­ce espionage affected the threats.

Some foreign spy agencies had reassessed the risks of conducting clandestin­e intelligen­ce operations in Australia, the report said.

“However, we anticipate the most capable foreign intelligen­ce services will adapt their behaviour over time to circumvent the new legislatio­n,” the report said.

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