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Further questions over Port of Newcastle ties to Chinese Communist Party

Documents have revealed the China Merchants Group took a 50 per cent stake in the Newcastle port as part of a privatisation deal organised by then-NSW Premier Mike Baird.

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New revelations about the close ties of the Port of Newcastle’s part-owners to the Chinese Communist Party have raised further questions about the wisdom of allowing Beijing to hold a 50 per cent stake in Australia’s largest coal export facility.

According to company documents, China Merchants Group (CMG), parent company of China Merchant Ports which took a 50 per cent stake in the Newcastle port as part of a privatisation deal organised by then-NSW Premier Mike Baird, boasts that it is guided by “Xi Jinping thought.”

Mike Baird, former NSW Premier. Picture: Britta Campion / The Australian
Mike Baird, former NSW Premier. Picture: Britta Campion / The Australian

“With its long history and strong strength, CMG has an extensive influence on the industrial and commercial circles at home and abroad,” the company boasts.

“In the new era, with Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a New Era and the spirit of the 19th CPC National Congress as the guidelines, CMG has proposed the strategic principle of … One Belt One Road.”

Additionally, The Daily Telegraph can reveal that a number of China Merchants Group have previously served as high-ranking functionaries of the Chinese Communist Party.

Chinese President Xi Jinping. Photo: Noel Celis/AFP
Chinese President Xi Jinping. Photo: Noel Celis/AFP

Chen Zuofo, according to his own professional biography on a China Merchants Group web page, previously served as Deputy Party Secretary and Secretary of Commission for Discipline Inspection for the Chinese Communist Party at the China Export & Credit Insurance Corporation, and also worked in the general office of the CCP’s Central Committee.

China Merchants’ Board Secretary, Chu Zongsheng, formerly served as a deputy division chief of the CCP as well as acting as general counsel for SASAC, the governing body that controls major state-owned operations for Beijing.

Coal ships are loaded with coal in the Port of Newcastle. Picture: Liam Driver
Coal ships are loaded with coal in the Port of Newcastle. Picture: Liam Driver

And Bai Jingtao, managing director of China Merchant Ports – the company which holds the stake in Newcastle’s port along with investment group The Infrastructure Fund – served as an officer or director in a number of Chinese government departments including the Ministry of Communications.

Last month The Daily Telegraph reported on concerns from security experts that, as part of its attempts to punish Australia for a variety of perceived slights, Beijing could use its influence or control of facilities like the Newcastle port to raise charges on exporters or otherwise tighten the screws on local businesses.

A coal ship enters the Port of Newcastle. Picture: AAP Image/Darren Pateman
A coal ship enters the Port of Newcastle. Picture: AAP Image/Darren Pateman

At the time Peter Jennings, head of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, said, “If you have a place like the Port of Newcastle where CMPort is able to put on punitive costs that hurt Australians businesses, that will absolutely happen if the CCP tells them to do so.”

Meanwhile, Queensland Nationals senator Matt Canavan told The Daily Telegraph that banks and super funds should be encouraged to “buy back the farm” to repay the generosity of taxpayer bailouts.

“The government should review all investments with links to the Chinese Communist Party, and it would be a lot easier if Australian businesses came forward to invest in Australian assets.

“The Australian Government has kept businesses afloat through assistance like JobKeeper - our banks and super funds should return the favour by helping us buy Australia back,” he said.

Read related topics:Australia-China relations

Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/nsw/further-questions-over-port-of-newcastle-ties-to-chinese-communist-party/news-story/8b73bc4ea282f6d5cbbcb91131eacba7