Topic | CCP influence | The Sydney Morning Herald

We’re sorry, this feature is currently unavailable. We’re working to restore it. Please try again later.

CCP influence

Advertisement
Aaron staged a protest in Australia, then Chinese police paid his parents a visit

Aaron staged a protest in Australia, then Chinese police paid his parents a visit

Aaron, an international student studying in Sydney, knows all too well that the industrial-scale surveillance deployed by the Chinese government doesn’t stop at the border.

  • by Lisa Visentin

Latest

Australia pays controversial Chinese company millions for Nauru’s new port

Australia pays controversial Chinese company millions for Nauru’s new port

Despite a patchy track record, including allegations of bribery, the Beijing-backed company is delivering a major project for the tiny Pacific nation, which is a major focus in the competition for influence in the region.

  • by Nick McKenzie
MP says Chinese high school students were bussed in to elect him

MP says Chinese high school students were bussed in to elect him

The MP says the teenagers were brought into vote for him in an election that is now central to an inquiry into interference in Canadian elections by foreign countries.

  • by Norimitsu Onishi
Double life of China’s man in Suva could help Australia in the Pacific

Double life of China’s man in Suva could help Australia in the Pacific

Beijing’s use of Chinese nationals to further its ambitions in the Pacific has received a setback by the revelation that their man in Suva is mentioned in Australian spy agency documents as having links with organised crime and drug shipments.

  • The Herald's View
Yes, there are Chinese police in Fiji. But that’s none of our business
Opinion
Opinion

Yes, there are Chinese police in Fiji. But that’s none of our business

Australia has no right to dictate to Fiji who its police force works with, particularly when we already work with Chinese police on transnational crime.

  • by Graeme Smith
‘Priority target’: The businessman at the top of Australia’s intelligence hit list

‘Priority target’: The businessman at the top of Australia’s intelligence hit list

The suspect’s identification by intelligence agencies raises big questions for one of Australia’s neighbours and about China’s attempts to wield influence in the Pacific.

  • by Nick McKenzie and Amelia Ballinger
Advertisement
Raided, hooded and flown to China: Secret Fiji video reveals Beijing’s ‘rendition’ tactics

Raided, hooded and flown to China: Secret Fiji video reveals Beijing’s ‘rendition’ tactics

Fiji’s prime minister has called on China to retreat from the South Pacific as an investigation by The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and 60 Minutes uncovers a police sting showing Beijing’s desire to operate overseas.

  • by Nick McKenzie and Amelia Ballinger
Former Liberal candidate jailed over Chinese interference plan

Former Liberal candidate jailed over Chinese interference plan

Di Sanh Duong has become the first person found guilty under Australian foreign interference laws after he tried to put in place a plan to influence then-minister Alan Tudge.

  • by Erin Pearson
Amazon self-censors Nicole Kidman’s new show in Hong Kong
Analysis
Analysis

Amazon self-censors Nicole Kidman’s new show in Hong Kong

Beijing’s national security laws aimed to wipe out dissent in the democratic enclave of Hong Kong. Now they have neutered Nicole Kidman in the Amazon series Expats.

  • by Eryk Bagshaw
Then there were two: Sport diplomacy panel in limbo as positions left vacant by Wong

Then there were two: Sport diplomacy panel in limbo as positions left vacant by Wong

A 13-member sport diplomacy council with former top Australian athletes aimed at boosting ties in the Pacific appears to have been quietly unwound by Labor.

  • by Lisa Visentin
Security experts criticise decision to leave Port of Darwin in Chinese hands

Security experts criticise decision to leave Port of Darwin in Chinese hands

The 99-year lease of the Port of Darwin by Chinese company Landbridge will remain in place after security agencies found systems existed to manage the risk.

  • by James Massola and Rachel Clun