Australia

Australia rejects Chinese claim reporters evaded the law

Agence France-Presse

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Australia rejects Chinese claim reporters evaded the law

BILL BIRTLES. This handout photograph taken and released on September 8, 2020 by ABC News shows Australian Broadcasting Corporation journalist Bill Birtles waving as he arrives in Sydney after leaving China over arrest fears. Photo by Taryn Southcombe/ABC News/AFP

AFP

'What our embassy officials did was provide appropriate protection to those two journalists, ensuring they could safely leave China,' says an Australian official

Australia on Friday, September 11, denied obstructing a probe into two journalists who fled China under consular protection this week, saying its diplomats behaved appropriately.

Responding to Beijing’s claims that the Australian diplomats helped Bill Birtles and Mike Smith “evade China’s investigation,” a top minister pointed out that China had agreed to a deal allowing their departure.

Birtles, a correspondent for national broadcaster ABC, and Smith who worked for the Australian Financial Review, sought refuge in Australian diplomatic missions after being told by police they were wanted for questioning.

The pair left China earlier this week after an agreement was struck between Beijing and Canberra to have them questioned by police before leaving.

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China accuses Australia of helping reporters ‘evade’ investigation

China accuses Australia of helping reporters ‘evade’ investigation

“What our embassy officials did was provide appropriate protection to those two journalists, ensuring they could safely leave China,” Trade Minister Simon Birmingham said.

China’s foreign ministry on Thursday, September 11, claimed Australia’s actions went “well beyond consular protection”, and said it had interfered in “China’s internal affairs and judicial sovereignty”.

Birmingham insisted that Australia had engaged “appropriately” with Chinese authorities to negotiate a deal that “was respectful of China’s processes but protected the safety of these two Australian journalists”.

The duo’s dramatic flight was the latest flare-up in a protracted squabble between China and Australia over trade, security and responsibility for the coronavirus pandemic.

Both men had been questioned about another Australian citizen, Cheng Lei, who worked as an anchor for Chinese state TV and was detained on unspecified “national security” grounds for nearly a month. – Rappler.com

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