Ted Hui's Australia Move 'nothing To Do With China'

"); jQuery("#212 h3").html("

Related News Programmes

"); });

2021-03-11 HKT 11:18

Share this story

facebook

  • Former pro-democracy lawmaker Ted Hui often turned up at the protests of 2019 to try to help prevent clashes between police and demonstrators. File photo: AFP

    Former pro-democracy lawmaker Ted Hui often turned up at the protests of 2019 to try to help prevent clashes between police and demonstrators. File photo: AFP

Hong Kong pro-democracy activist Ted Hui is welcome to campaign on political issues in Australia and his arrival is not a matter for China, the chair of the Australian parliament's intelligence committee said on Thursday.

In the first comments from an Australian government member since Hui arrived from London on Monday, the chairman of the parliament's committee on intelligence and security, James Paterson, said immigration policy was a "purely domestic sovereign issue for Australia".

Hui, who fled Hong Kong late last year as he faced criminal charges over democracy protests, said he moved from London to Australia to extend the reach of the pro-democracy movement's international lobbying.

Australia had a large community of Hong Kong people but no democracy movement leadership, he said.

In a statement on Hui, the Chinese embassy in Australia said it "urges the Australian side to stop meddling in Hong Kong's affairs and China's internal affairs in any way. Otherwise the China-Australia relations will only sustain further damage".

"Any visitor to Australia, whether they are a citizen or not, enjoys all the rights and freedoms that Australians enjoy. They enjoy freedom of speech, freedom of political campaign, so he is welcome to do that here," Senator Paterson told ABC radio.

He added, "other visitors that have a different view to him are welcome to put their arguments too".

Hui was granted a tourist visa, an exemption to Australia's closed border policy, and government assistance to secure seats for his family on a repatriation flight from London. He said he didn't intend to seek asylum.

The government intelligence committee held a public hearing on Thursday on national security risks to the university sector, which has focused on research collaboration with China. (Reuters)

RECENT NEWS

Vietnam And South Korea Launch Cross-Border QR Payments

Vietnam and South Korea have launched cross-border QR payments that allow Korean users to pay merchants in Vietnam thro... Read more

WeChat Pay Integrates With Local QR Networks In 5 Asian Countries

WeChat Pay has integrated its service with national QR code networks in five Asian countries, simplifying cross-border ... Read more

Global Transition Finance Ecosystem Gains Momentum

The global transition finance ecosystem is gaining momentum. According to new research by the Hong Kong Institute for M... Read more

Banking Circle Taps PayGate To Ease KRW Cross-Border Payments Into South Korea

Global payments bank Banking Circle will now handle cross-border transactions and settlement flows for South Korean pay... Read more

Equinix AI Discovery Hub Opens In Hong Kong For Enterprise AI

Digital infrastructure company Equinix is partnering with Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) to launch the Equinix AI Dis... Read more

Tencent, Alibaba Eye DeepSeek Stake As AI Startup Tops US$20B Valuation

Chinese tech giants Tencent and Alibaba are in discussions to invest in AI startup DeepSeek, The Information reported, ... Read more