Australia Seeks Release of Writer as China Warns Not to Interfere

Australia Seeks Release of Writer as China Warns Not to Interfere
Australian writer Yang Hengjun wishes Happy New Year to his Twitter followers at an unidentified location in this still image from an undated video obtained via social media. Twitter@yanghengjun via Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

SYDNEY—Australia will advocate for the release of a Chinese-born Australian writer held by Beijing on suspicion of espionage, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Aug. 29, rejecting warnings by China not to interfere.

Yang Hengjun, a former Chinese diplomat turned online journalist and blogger, was last week formally arrested by Chinese authorities, seven months after he was detained in the country.

China has warned Australia not to interfere in its legal process, but Morrison said Australia will not be silenced.

“We‘ll stand up for our citizen and we’ll expect him to be treated appropriately and his human rights to be respected,” Morrison told Channel 9 television, saying suggestions that Yang was a spy for Australia were “absolutely untrue.”

“We make no apologies for standing up for one of our citizens.”

Prime Minister of Australia Scott Morrison reacts during the APEC CEO Summit 2018 at the Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea on Nov. 17, 2018. (Fazry Ismail/Pool via Reuters)
Prime Minister of Australia Scott Morrison reacts during the APEC CEO Summit 2018 at the Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea on Nov. 17, 2018. Fazry Ismail/Pool via Reuters

The arrest comes amid growing diplomatic tension between Canberra and Beijing, including accusations of Chinese meddling in domestic political affairs that China has denied.

Strong trade ties between the two sides add to the diplomatic sensitivity of the case, as China is Australia’s biggest export market.

Morrison’s comments came as Yang pleaded with the Australian prime minister to “help me go home as soon as possible” during an Aug. 27 visit by staff from Australia’s embassy in Beijing, a source familiar with the details told Reuters.

China has not allowed Yang, whose legal name is Yang Jun, access to his lawyers or family since his detention, the Australian government has said.

Yang, 53, was formally arrested on Aug. 23. Espionage is punishable by death in China.

Canberra has said Yang was being held in harsh conditions and that it expected him to be treated in accordance with human rights law.

China’s foreign ministry condemned Morrison’s remarks at a regular press briefing on Thursday afternoon.

“On the one hand they say they do not interfere in China’s judicial sovereignty, but on the other hand they make wanton accusations on matters within China’s jurisdiction and try to pressure our country,” said Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang.

Morrison said Australia would continue to raise its concerns over Yang’s treatment.

“I mean, that’s not interfering in the system,” he said, adding he respected that China had its own legal system.

“But we do expect Australians, indeed all citizens, to have their human rights appropriately looked after.”

Several Australians have faced jail time in China over the past decade, including the former head of global miner Rio Tinto’s China iron ore business, Australian citizen Stern Hu, who served eight years after a conviction in 2010 for corruption and stealing commercial secrets.

More recently, 16 staff from Australia’s Crown Resorts, including three Australians, were jailed for between 9 and 10 months in 2017 and fined 8.62 million yuan ($1.2 million) for promoting gambling to lure Chinese high-rollers to its casinos.

By John Mai