Albanese says government received 'clear security advice' over
risk
June 15, 2023 16:35
JST
CANBERRA
(AP) -- Australia's Parliament passed legislation on Thursday to prevent Russia
from building a new embassy near Parliament House citing threats of espionage
and political interference, as tensions grow between Moscow and a major
supporter of the Ukraine war effort.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said
the legislation would extinguish Russia's lease on the site of a second embassy
based on the advice of security agencies.
"The government has received
very clear security advice as to the risk presented by a new Russian presence
so close to Parliament House," Albanese told reporters. "We are
acting quickly to ensure the lease site does not become a formal diplomatic
presence."
Albanese said Australia's government
condemns Russia's "illegal and immoral invasion of Ukraine."
Australia is one of the most
generous providers of military hardware, training and aid to Ukraine of any
country outside NATO and has escalated sanctions against Russia since the war
began in February 2022.
Australia's growing hostility toward
Russia became apparent last year when Australian officials demanded Moscow be
held accountable for Russian cybercriminals suspected of hacking the nation's
largest health insurer, Medibank, and dumping customers' personal medical
records on the dark web. It is unusual for Australia to attribute blame to a
country for an unsolved cybercrime.
Albanese said opposition and other
lawmakers that are not aligned with the government were briefed on the
legislation on Wednesday night and had agreed to pass it through both chambers
Thursday. The government holds a majority in the House but not the Senate.
Within three hours of Albanese
publicly announcing the bill, it had become law, passing the House then the
Senate. The law is expected to take effect later Thursday when it is
rubber-stamped by Governor-General David Hurley, representing Australia's head
of state, King Charles III.
Home Affairs Minister Clare O'Neil
was later more specific about the Russian threat while addressing Parliament,
saying the "scope for espionage and foreign interference from the site
would have been a substantial risk for the nation."
"The action is direct and
decisive. We do not have any interest in sugarcoating this message,"
O'Neil said. "We will not stand for espionage and foreign interference in
our country. We will act in the face of danger to our democracy and our
citizens and we will do so without any apology to anyone."
Opposition leader Peter Dutton said
the Parliament was united against the Russian threat.
"We won't tolerate foreign
espionage conducted in a way that is against our national interest. We won't
tolerate people seeking to interfere with electoral processes in our
country," Dutton told Parliament.
Albanese did not directly answer
when asked if there were also security concerns about the Chinese Embassy
across a street from the Russian site.
"We're dealing with this very
specifically, and it's based upon very specific advice as well about the nature
of the construction that's proposed for this site, about the location of this
site, and about the capability that would present in terms of potential
interference with activity that occurs in this Parliament House," Albanese
said.
The Russian Embassy said it would
comment later Thursday.
The Australian government decided to
act after Russia won a Federal Court case last month that prevented its
eviction from the site now under construction.
The 99-year lease was canceled by
local Canberra authorities on the basis of a lack of construction activity
since Russia was given the lease in the diplomatic precinct of Yarralumla in
2008 and plans for the complex of buildings were approved in 2011.
Under the lease conditions, Russia
had agreed to complete construction within three years, but only a single,
small perimeter building of the planned complex has been built.
Russia has said it already spent
$5.5 million on the site.
The National Capital Authority,
which administers embassy leases, decided to terminate the Russian lease,
citing that "ongoing unfinished works detract from the overall aesthetic,
importance and dignity of the area reserved for diplomatic missions."
Russia currently occupies the former
USSR embassy in the suburb of Griffith, farther from Parliament House than the
new site. The Yarralumla site would provide Russia with two clusters of
buildings.
The Russian Embassy would remain in
Griffith and Australia's Embassy would remain in Moscow, Albanese said.
O'Neil said no embassy would be
allowed on the site.
"The principal problem with the
proposed second Russian Embassy in Canberra is its location. This location sits
directly adjacent to Parliament House," O'Neil said.
https://asia.nikkei.com/Politics/International-relations/Australia-blocks-Russia-from-building-new-embassy-near-Parliament
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