Chinese-Australian political donor 'linked to UN bribery scandal'

AFP  |  Sydney 

A billionaire previously accused of meddling in Australian on China's behalf was co-conspirator in a plot to bribe a top official, a senior Australian has claimed.

"CC-3 is Dr Chau Chak Wing," Hastie said in a speech on Tuesday evening, further fuelling fears about Chinese efforts to shape policy and opinion in democratic institutions.

"The same man who co-conspired to bribe the UN of the General Assembly, The same man with extensive contacts in the Chinese Communist Party," he said.

"I share it with the house because I believe it to be in the national interest." Hastie's allegation follows recent meetings with and security agency officials, who he said confirmed the identity. He said the reasons CC-3 had not been charged were "best undisclosed".

Ashe, an Antiguan who was UN for a year from September 2013, was accused of accepting bribes from Chinese businesspeople seeking to influence the world body.

He was arrested in 2015 and died a year later, with the damaging scandal a major blow to the UN, which seeks to promote corruption-free good governance worldwide.

It prompted the UN to overhaul financial oversight of the president's office.

Several people named in the conspiracy have previously been named and some have been jailed.

But the identity of CC-3 has never been made public.

was caught off by the revelation, admitting he had not been forewarned by Hastie and had sought advice from national security agencies on the implications of publicly revealing intelligence from an ally.

But he also claimed the allegations were not new "and I do not propose to say anything more about them because they are subject to judicial proceedings".

Chau last year was at the centre of an investigation by the and Fairfax Media, which claimed he and another man had donated millions of dollars to Australian political parties over a decade.

The reports led to announce an inquiry into espionage laws and foreign government interference amid growing concerns about using the political donations system to gain access.

reacted furiously to the moves, and ties have been tense ever since, with the Chinese foreign ministry on Tuesday saying needed to "take off its tinted glsses" if it wanted to improve relations.

Chau, an Australian citizen who made his money in property development, has consistently denied any links to the Communist Party or the UN scandal and is suing the two

His in that defamation case, Mark O'Brien, told The Australian newspaper Wednesday that Hastie had slandered his client and the reason Chau was given the CC-3 pseudonym was to protect his reputation because he was never a suspect.

"Dr Chau has brought these defamation proceedings to give his accusers the opportunity to prove their allegations in court," he said.

"If he was concerned about them, he would not have exposed himself to these proceedings." Hastie said he was partly motivated to speak out because Chau was suing the press.

"My concern is that defamation cases can have a chilling effect on our free press," he said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, May 23 2018. 11:55 IST