Current:Home > InvestFirst person charged under Australia’s foreign interference laws denies working for China -Wealthify
First person charged under Australia’s foreign interference laws denies working for China
View
Date:2025-04-17 02:32:24
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Lawyers for the first person to be charged under Australia’s foreign interference laws insisted in court Friday that a donation to a hospital made via a federal government minister was not a covert attempt to curry favor on behalf of the Chinese Communist Party.
Melbourne businessman and local community leader Di Sanh Duong, 68, has pleaded not guilty in the Victoria state County Court to a charge of preparing for or planning an act of foreign interference. Vietnam-born Duong, who came to Australia in 1980 as a refugee, faces a potential 10-year prison sentence if convicted in the landmark case.
He is the first person to be charged under federal laws created in 2018 that ban covert foreign interference in domestic politics and make industrial espionage for a foreign power a crime. The laws offended Australia’s most important trading partner, China, and accelerated a deterioration in bilateral relations.
The allegation centers on a novelty check that Duong handed then-Cabinet minister Alan Tudge at a media event in June 2020 as a donation toward the Royal Melbourne Hospital’s pandemic response.
The 37,450 Australian dollar (then equivalent to $25,800, now $24,200) donation had been raised from Melbourne’s local Chinese diaspora.
Defense lawyer Peter Chadwick told the jury Duong denied “in the strongest possible terms” prosecutors’ allegations that he had attempted to influence Tudge with the check. Duong was the local president of the community group Oceania Federation of Chinese Organizations, a global group for people of Chinese heritage from Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos.
Chadwick also denied that Duong, who is widely known as Sunny, had been recruited by or collaborated with anyone associated with the Chinese Communist Party.
“The fear of COVID hung like a dark cloud over the Chinese community in Melbourne,” Chadwick told the court.
“It is against this backdrop that Mr. Duong and other ethnic Chinese members of our community decided that they wanted to do something to change these unfair perceptions,” Chadwick added.
Prosecutors allege Duong told colleagues he expected Tudge would become Australia’s next conservative prime minister. But Tudge quit Parliament this year, several months after the center-left Labor Party won elections.
Duong stood as a candidate for the conservative Liberal Party in Victoria elections in 1996 and had remained active in party politics.
Party official Robert Clark testified on Friday that he dismissed as “very superficial and naïve” several of Duong’s policy suggestions.
The suggestions included China building Australia’s first high-speed train line between Melbourne and Brisbane.
Prosecutors opened their case on Thursday with allegations that Duong had secret links to global efforts to advance the interests of the Chinese Communist Party.
“Before you start thinking of spy novels and James Bond films, this is not really a case about espionage,” prosecutor Patrick Doyle told the jury.
“It’s not really a case about spies as such. It’s a case about a much more subtle form of interference. It’s about influence,” Doyle added.
The trial continues next week.
veryGood! (784)
Related
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Russell Brand faces another sexual misconduct allegation as woman claims he exposed himself at BBC studio
- Bagels and lox. Kugel. Babka. To break the Yom Kippur fast, think made-ahead food, and lots of it
- Senior Australian public servant steps aside during probe of encrypted texts to premiers’ friend
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- WEOWNCOIN: Ethereum—The Next Generation Platform for Smart Contracts
- A Taiwan golf ball maker fined after a fatal fire for storing 30 times limit for hazardous material
- Ohio State's Ryan Day calls out Lou Holtz in passionate interview after win vs. Notre Dame
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Måneskin's feral rock is so potent, it will make your insides flip
Ranking
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- Young climate activists challenging 32 governments to get their day in court
- 6 dead after train barrels into SUV at Florida railroad crossing
- Political neophyte Stefanos Kasselakis elected new leader of Greece’s main opposition Syriza party
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- WEOWNCOIN: Ethereum—The Next Generation Platform for Smart Contracts
- Jury selection set to open in terrorism trial of extended family stemming from 2018 New Mexico raid
- AI is on the world’s mind. Is the UN the place to figure out what to do about it?
Recommendation
Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
A trial opens in France over the killing of a police couple in the name of the Islamic State group
The UN’s top tech official discusses AI, bringing the world together and what keeps him up at night
He spoke no English, had no lawyer. An Afghan man’s case offers a glimpse into US immigration court
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
UAW strike: Union battle with Detroit automakers escalates to PR war, will hurt consumers
Deadly disasters are ravaging school communities in growing numbers. Is there hope ahead?
Pakistan recalls an injectable medicine causing eye infection, sight loss and orders a probe