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Australian Government's Pacification on China's Rights Draws Criticism
(clearwisdom.net) At the annual "human rights dialogue" on Monday, June 27, the Australian delegation did not raise the case of defecting Chinese diplomat Chen Yonglin, who claimed that the Chinese Government had deployed about 1000 spies to persecute Chinese-Australian pro-democracy activists and Falun Gong practitioners. People from different walks of life criticized the government for being too timid and blindly compromising with the Chinese communist regime.
The Age, an Australian newspaper, reported on June 28, 2005 that the Federal Government has come under fire for failing to question Chinese officials about claims that Chinese agents have persecuted political dissidents in Australia.
According to the report, at an annual and closed "human rights dialogue" on Monday, Australian officials did not raise allegations that the Chinese Government had persecuted Chinese-Australian pro-democracy activists and practitioners of Falun Gong. Geoff Raby, the Foreign Affairs Department official who led the talks, said it was "not the forum" for tackling the allegations.
The report stated that the failure to raise the claims have fuelled accusations that Australia is taking a "softly softly" approach on human rights to keep good relations with China.
Australian government criticized over China human rights
According to a report from Radio Australia on June 28, 2005, Australia's main opposition Labor Party has criticized the Government for not raising the case of defecting Chinese diplomat Chen Yonglin during its annual human rights dialogue with China.
Mr. Chen claims there are up to a thousand Chinese spies in Australia, some of whom are monitoring the Falun Gong movement, which is outlawed in China. |