Mysterious letter shows influence of Chinese community in crucial Bennelong by-election

Updated December 15, 2017 09:20:42

The crucial by-election in Bennelong has been dominated by rising tensions between Canberra and Beijing, with a mysterious letter urging the local Chinese community to abandon the Coalition and support Kristina Keneally.

Key points:

  • Shared widely on WeChat, letter reflects growing concerns about foreign donations ban
  • ABC has not established who wrote the letter
  • Fairfax linked letter to body once led by Chinese billionaire Huang Xiangmo

The letter shared on Chinese language social media platform WeChat said the Turnbull Government was helping the media accuse Chinese leaders and students of being spies, without adequate evidence.

Its content appears to reflect growing concerns within China about the Coalition's proposed ban on foreign donations and interference, which Beijing has condemned as an attempt to stir "China panic".

"In our eyes, the current Liberal Coalition party is very different from before — it's now an extreme right wing ruling party," the letter said.

"They are against China, against Asian migrants, against Chinese international students in broad daylight and under the table."

The letter said it had been written by "a group of Chinese people who have made Australia their home".

The ABC has not established who wrote the letter, or how many people in Bennelong have received it, although Fairfax Media reports it was shared by a leader of the Australian Council for the Promotion of Peaceful Reunification of China.

The council has told the ABC they know nothing about the letter, have nothing to do with the issue, and have no preference for either political party and "full confidence in Australia".

Close to 19 percent of Bennelong residents have a mother who was born in China and the community's votes will play a crucial role in the by-election.

The letter points out that if Labor were to win at the polls, the Turnbull Government would lose its slim majority in the House of Representatives.

"The votes from Chinese voters in these areas may directly vote down Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull," the letter said.

It also accuses the Turnbull Government of being hostile in the South China Sea and not standing up to One Nation's anti-immigration rhetoric.

"They are pushing the Australia and China relationship to the edge of distrust," the letter said.

"All of this hurts the interest of Chinese Australians, and they are not in line with the interests of Australia.

"This will be the nightmare for all Australians."

Turnbull strongly rejects 'desperate' China-phobia claims

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has rejected claims the Coalition is stirring up anti-China sentiment, as Labor leader Bill Shorten has alleged during the by-election campaign.

Mr Shorten called on the Prime Minister to "pull his head in on his China-phobia" earlier this week.

"It is a desperate and absurd claim," Mr Turnbull said.

"Our ties with China are stronger all the time and they are basically built by people-to-people links and family links."

At a press conference on Thursday, Mr Turnbull said Labor was trying to turn Australians against each other for political gain.

"You can imagine how everyone feels in the Government, especially me, to have Kristina Keneally and Bill Shorten saying I am anti-Chinese," he said.

"There are 1 million Australians of Chinese ancestry.

"You could not imagine Australia without them, they built Australia, together with all of the rest of our extraordinary diverse community."

Mr Turnbull has also referenced his Chinese daughter-in-law as evidence he is deeply connected to the Chinese community.

"To suggest that somebody whose granddaughter is one of those one million Australians of Chinese ancestry, is anything other than a friend of Chinese people is absurd, completely absurd," he said.

The Liberal Party has also directly appealed to the Chinese community in Bennelong, by sharing "scratchies" in Mandarin that say it would be a gamble to vote for Labor.

"Scratch the panels below to reveal the consequences of voting Labor," the material said.

When Mr Turnbull announced foreign interference legislation, which has been firmly condemned by the Chinese Government, he stressed it was not specifically related to China.

Australia's ambassador in Beijing was hauled in to see the Chinese Foreign Minister earlier this week for a robust discussion, amid rising tensions between the two nations.

Translation by Ning Pan, Asia Pacific Newsroom.

Topics: elections, political-parties, alp, liberals, government-and-politics, federal-government, ryde-2112, australia, nsw, sydney-2000, china

First posted December 14, 2017 13:05:46

  • Kitchen utensils The rise of minimalism

    By Maria Tickle for Blueprint for Living

    In recent years, the rise of the minimalist movement has seen many people embark on a quest to learn to live with less stuff.

  • church with cross Do the leaders of the church really get it?

    The 'few bad apples' scenario is untenable now. The royal commission has shown that what is wrong pervades the whole orchard, writes Tom Keneally.

  • Ayan Macuach looks at the camera. Sudanese refugee fights stereotypes

    By Cheryl Hall

    Aspiring law student Ayan Macuach wants to be the first in her family to go to university, but she's had to fight hard to get an opportunity.

  • Top Stories

    Just In

    Most Popular

    Site Map

    Sections

    Local Weather

    Local News

    Media

    Subscribe

    Connect