Beijing accuses Australia of 'whipping up anti-China sentiment' after foreign interference accusations

The Chinese government has accused Australia of smearing China, as relations between the two nations continue to sour.

Spokesperson from China's foreign ministry, Wang Wenbin, has accused Australia of stirring up "anti-China" sentiment.

Spokesperson from China's foreign ministry, Wang Wenbin, has accused Australia of stirring up "anti-China" sentiment. Source: AAP

China's foreign ministry has said its diplomats in Australia abide by international law, accusing some in the country of smearing China, following media reports Australian police had accessed communications of Chinese diplomats.

Ties between Australia and its biggest trading partner have been plagued over recent years by Australian complaints of Chinese interference in its politics.

China has consistently denied the accusations.

"Some figures in Australia are fond of smearing and attacking China to whip up anti-China sentiment," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said.
A document lodged in the High Court on 1 September by the Australian Government Solicitor is the first official acknowledgement that the investigation into an alleged plot to influence an Australian politician centred on China.

The Australian Federal Police (AFP) and the Australian Security and Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) have declined to comment on whether a raid on the offices of a New South Wales state politician and his staffer on 26 June was related to China.

But the court filing stated the search warrant used by police identifies the foreign principal as the 'Government of the People's Republic of China (PRC)'.

John Zhang, who worked for NSW Labor politician Shaoquett Moselmane, has asked the High Court to quash the search warrants used to search his home, business and Mr Moselmane's parliament office.
The Rockdale home NSW Labor MP Shaoquett Moselmane was raided by federal police as part of an investigation into allegations of foreign interference.
The Rockdale home NSW Labor MP Shaoquett Moselmane was raided by federal police as part of an investigation into allegations of foreign interference. Source: AAP
The government's court document, signed off by Australia's Solicitor-General Stephen Donaghue, was lodged the day after it warned Australian journalists working in China to leave for safety reasons.

The Chinese government has said ASIO searched four Chinese journalists in Australia in June.

Earlier on Wednesday, the Chinese Consulate General in Sydney rejected an ABC News report that one of its officials was also named in the search warrants.

"The accusations that the Consulate General and its official engaged in infiltration activities are totally baseless and nothing but vicious slanders," the statement said.

“It always observes international law and basic norms of international relations while exercising duties in Australia.”
A police spokeswoman said the investigation was going on.

Australia's foreign interference law criminalised harmful or covert conduct by foreign principals seeking to interfere in the democratic processes to support their intelligence activities or prejudice Australia's national security, the court document said.

Australia's tense relations with China worsened this year after Australia called for an international enquiry into the source of the novel coronavirus, which emerged in China late last year.


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3 min read
Published 16 September 2020 8:48pm
Updated 16 September 2020 8:55pm
Source: Reuters, SBS


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