The “service centre” is among 48 Chinese Communist Party (CCP)-operated illegal police outputs globally that have been newly publicized by the Spain-based human rights NGO, which had earlier identified 54 such outposts, bringing the total number to 102 with a presence in 53 countries.
The Epoch Times called the number of the Sydney service centre listed on the webpage, but the call could not be connected.
An officer at Nantong Public Security Bureau in China also told The Epoch Times that they don’t currently have any police service centre in Sydney. The officer avoided answering if they used to have any of these centres in Australia in the past.
“Just contact the embassy,” she said.
China’s embassy in Canberra did not respond to The Epoch Times’s requests for comments about the two contact points in Australia.
Local Australian Chinese Worry About CCP Police Presence
The potential existence of a CCP-operated police station in Eastwood, one of the biggest Chinese communities in Sydney, has raised concerns of some Chinese Australians living in the suburb.“Absolutely terrifying,” Leechen Zhang, a Chinese Australian, said. “All of a sudden, I heard a police point [is] just two kilometres away from me. That’s very scary.”
Zhang, who escaped the CCP’s persecution of Falun Gong, a meditation practice combined with moral teachings, said the Chinese police are different from police in democratic countries.
“[Their] functions are different,” she said. “This control and supervision by the police assist the [Chinese] government to suppress the people.”
Joey Huang, a coordinator of the Falun Gong practice site in Eastwood, also was concerned that the CCP police presence in the suburb could have had some connection with interference the group has experienced in the past.
“There is some surveillance on our practice site. I once noticed that there were people taking pictures of us,” he said.
“With this police station, they can better recruit spies...,” he alleged. “ It [the CCP] can use the relationship between Australians and people in China, business relations, family and friends, etc., to coerce many people to work for it. Everything can be weaponized.”
Huang called on the government to look into the alleged police stations further.
“It’s intolerable that such a thing exists [in the community],” he said. “The Australian government should take action as soon as possible and eliminate these things, to maintain [a] normal democratic social life in Australia and protect groups targeted by the CCP.”
Responses from Governments
At least 14 countries have launched official investigations into the reports of illegal Chinese police service stations in their jurisdictions, including Austria, Canada, Chile, Czech, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Nigeria, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and the United States, according to a tally by Safeguard Defenders.“AFP Deputy Commissioner Investigations addressed questions relating to these matters in the Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee Estimates hearing on Nov. 8, 2022,” an AFP spokesperson told The Epoch Times in an email.
“No further comment will be made.”
Ian McCartney, Deputy Commissioner for the AFP, said last month that he doesn’t believe the CCP’s contact point in Sydney is active.
“In terms of the work we do in the countering foreign interference space, it doesn’t stand still. It is ongoing, and I’m not prepared in an opening hearing to detail those issues.”
McCartney’s response triggered harsh criticism from Chin Jin, a Sydney-based China expert.
“Beijing has been infiltrating the West in a silent manner. Confucius Institutes, Chinese media and Chinese communities, business, academia, media, and even politics in Australia are all targets of the CCP’s infiltration,” he said.