Two Australian politicians have been denied entry to China ahead of a planned study trip to Beijing next month.
West Australia MP Andrew Hastie and Victorian Senator James Paterson, both from the right-leaning Liberal Party, had planned to attend a three-day study trip to Beijing in December.
The trip was planned by China Matters, a China policy think tank, which had invited Hastie, Paterson, as well as Shadow Minister for Resources Matt Keogh. But the Chinese regime rejected Hastie’s and Paterson’s visas, according to the think tank.
“We are disappointed that this opportunity for dialogue now won’t occur. We are particularly disappointed that the apparent reason why we are not welcome in China at this time is our frankness about the Chinese Communist Party,” they wrote.
“Despite this, we will always speak out in defense of Australia’s values, sovereignty, and national interest,“ they added. “We look forward to a time when the Chinese government realizes it has nothing to fear from honest discussion and the free exchange of ideas.”
‘Price for Speaking Out’
In August, the Chinese regime denounced Hastie’s comments, which drew a comparison between the West’s response to China’s rise and France’s failure to contain the advance of Nazi Germany.Meanwhile, Paterson has spoken out about foreign influence risks at Australian universities and the escalating violence in Hong Kong and says he will continue to do so.
“Hong Kong is one of the most amazing places in the world, and what is happening there is an absolute tragedy, and I believe the Communist Party bears some responsibility for that.”
Paterson also told the ABC: "There’s nothing to fear on behalf of the Chinese government from people like Andrew and I traveling to Beijing, visiting China and engaging in a genuine good-faith discussion with China’s counterparts.
Media Reports to Blame?
China Matters’ CEO said he didn’t think that the Liberal MPs’ previous outspoken comments about the Chinese regime were the main issue. He instead attributed the visa cancellations to media reports of the trip that had disclosed the politicians’ names.“On all of our visits we encourage the participants to raise any questions, discuss anything they would like to discuss and on past visits we have been able to discuss everything from the situation with the Uyghurs in Xinjiang to the protest in Hong Kong without any issues,” he told the ABC.
“So I don’t think it is to do with the subject material that might be raised in China at all. Our understanding is that it was all about that we had this media attention to the visit before we had even gone to China.”
“It is most unfortunate that the names of the politicians who had accepted our invitation to join the study tour in December became public in advance,” the China policy think tank wrote in their statement.
“We believe that these politicians accepted our invitation in good faith with the aim of gaining a deeper understanding of the PRC and of sharing their views with PRC interlocutors,” the statement continued.
“Disappointingly, the media attention that ensued created an environment which was no longer conducive to our goal of facilitating low-key discussions and exchanging differing points of view behind closed doors. A guiding principle of these study tours has been that one publicly shares one’s study tour experiences upon return to Australia.”
Hastie and Senator Paterson have denied leaking the information to the media, reported AAP.