Amid BEIJING SPY SCANDAL CHINESE Australians Submit there is no Threat …

IS this in response to ongoing reports from Australia’s intelligence agencies, and now with a Strategic Analyst from ASPI spelling out a step by step account of espionage …

AND a former ASIO director-general Duncan Lewis having issued a stark warning on Chinese influence in the latest edition of the Quarterly Essay

SEARCH CAAN Website for earlier reports of Peter Jennings, ASPI … and an interview with Geraldine Doogue

A little background on Scott Yung …

Chinese state TV lauds Liberal candidate Scott Yung

Mr Yung got into politics after acting as a translator for John Howard when the former prime minister visited Kogarah five years ago. …

Mr Yung made headlines with his response to Labor leader Michael Daley’s remarks about “Asians with PhDs” displacing other Sydney residents.

AND pulled the well-worn ‘race card’

Michael Daley’s comments are racist,” Mr Yung said as he toured the seat with state Treasurer Dominic Perrottet on Wednesday. …

https://caanhousinginequalitywithaussieslockedout.com/2019/03/31/9840/

SEARCH CAAN WEBSITE FOR FACTS on the ‘PhD Student VISA’ …

Two of the three Chinese community representatives here happen to be members of the Liberal Party with Scott Yung a Party Candidate in the NSW March Election ... are they deep in the Egyptian River …deNile?

CONTRARY to what they submit … view this report:

‘Australia: Lack of Checks to Stop Foreign Spies being Elected: Expert Warns’

https://caanhousinginequalitywithaussieslockedout.com/2019/11/27/australia-lack-of-checks-to-stop-foreign-spies-being-elected-expert-warns/?fbclid=IwAR0EaEUnklen038mFbJmQwRjdKBL2mOYvwgptLvXIDnG78dKYgzHCA8pBTA

‘Not a threat’: Chinese Australians ask for understanding amid Beijing spy scandal

VIDEO:

blob:https://www.sbs.com.au/a13cd942-edd4-4088-bc5d-67dea5968d31

The alleged Chinese plot to infiltrate Australian parliament is having widespread political ramifications. But there are social implications too; as some Chinese Australians say they are now being perceived as a threat to society.

UPDATED: 26 NOVEMBER 2019

AGOBY OMAR DABBAGHSHARE

At a crowded café in Sydney’s bustling Chinatown district sit three men who each say they are feeling the repercussions of China’s alleged attempts to influence Australian politics.

The trio, all Australian citizens with Chinese ancestry, tell SBS the scandal has already impacted their daily lives – despite only being days old.

Scott Yung, founder and president of the Liberal Party Chinese Youth Council, says suspicions against politicians of Chinese ancestry have already hit close to home.

“Around the dinner table, my cousin to my absolute surprise, asked me ‘Scott, don’t some people think in the community that you might be a Chinese spy?’ and I was absolutely shocked by that,” he said.

I was quite hurt.

Mr Yung unsuccessfully ran in the 2019 NSW state election for the Liberal Party.

One of his friends, Jeffery Wang, has been a member of the Liberals since the early 2000s.

Scott Yung, centre, with Warren Wang, left, and Jeffrey Wang, right, in Sydney’s Chinatown district. (Omar Dabbagh/SBS News)SBS News/Omar Dabbagh

Mr Wang believes perceptions over Beijing’s reach and power are creating new stigmas against Chinese Australians.

“It does bother me a little bit in that I feel like sometimes we, Chinese Australians, are sometimes lumped in with the Chinese government for whatever reason,” Mr Wang told SBS News.

“In reality, most Chinese Australians would have very little affinity to the Chinese government. Sometimes they feel like they’re being sort of asked to account of actions of people they don’t know anything about.

VIDEO:

blob:https://www.sbs.com.au/ba7b2b3c-6c47-4858-8418-f7f4d8dfec01

Chinese Australians worry they’ve being viewed as a threat to Australian society

Widespread ramifications

Mounting claims against China – which it vehemently denies – have culminated in an ASIO and AFP investigation, adding to already fragile tensions between Canberra and Beijing.

Warren Wang, who moved to Sydney from mainland China in 2012 and recently became an Australian citizen, believes the Chinese Communist Party is trying to wield influence in Australia.

Wang

AFP ‘actively investigating’ alleged Chinese spy’s foreign interference claims

But he says the issue cannot be conflated with cultural discrimination.

“The CCP and the Chinese Australians, we should differ these two groups. There are some agents working for the government, working for CCP, but most Australian Chinese people, they are not,” he told SBS News.

“The real concern is that the CCP can be a threat but people are regarding Chinese people as a threat. Which is not correct.”

Last week former Prime Minister Paul Keating was scathing – as he warned against anti-China rhetoric.READ MORE

Chinese defector reportedly provides intelligence trove to Australia

“My concern is that what passes for the foreign policy of Australia lacks any sense of strategic realism and that the whispered word of ‘communism’ of old is now being replaced by the word ‘China’,” he told The Australian Strategic Forum.

Calls for caution and understanding

While describing the spy allegations as “deeply disturbing and troubling”, Prime Minister Scott Morrison has urged Australians against jumping to any conclusions.

And amid the continuing political rhetoric as intelligence agencies carry out their investigation, some Chinese Australians are asking for understanding – fearing the scandal could have a long-lasting impact on social cohesion.

“Chinese Australians are loyal Australians. They contributed a lot to our country, like all other Australians,” Mr Yung said.

“It’s important to separate those three categories: Chinese Australians, Chinese culture, and dealing with China, the administration themselves.”

‘Enemy of democracy’: Taiwan detains alleged agent linked to Chinese defector

“I don’t believe identity politics is helpful because, quite frankly, we are all individuals. We have very, very different values, ideologies and attitudes,” adds Jeffrey Wang, who is advocating for a concept he describes as “cultural competency”.

“It’s not just the linguistics, but also the cultural context that’s important when you’re communicating,” he explains.

“It’s not just a case of getting the right words but the right cultural context as well.”

SOURCE: https://www.sbs.com.au/news/not-a-threat-chinese-australians-ask-for-understanding-amid-beijing-spy-scandal?cx_cid=edm:newsam:2019

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