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Di Sanh ‘Sunny’ Duong: Melbourne businessman found guilty of plot to cultivate Alan Tudge for China

A businessman and philanthropist used a donation to help fight Covid-19 as cover to attempt to cultivate a “future prime minster”, a jury has found.

‘Irony not lost’: China accused of making complaints about foreign interference inquiry
NCA NewsWire

A businessman’s public hospital donation sat at the centre of an effort to cultivate a “future prime minister” for the Chinese Communist Party, a jury has found.

Over the past month, Di Sanh Duong, 68, has been facing trial in the Victorian County Court after denying he was planning to commit a foreign interference offence in early 2020.

The court reconvened at 2.30pm on Tuesday following a week of deliberations, after the jury indicated they had reached a unanimous verdict.

He was found guilty.

Di Sanh Duong, a long-term Liberal Party member, has been found guilty of preparing an act of foreign interference. Picture: NCA NewsWire / David Crosling
Di Sanh Duong, a long-term Liberal Party member, has been found guilty of preparing an act of foreign interference. Picture: NCA NewsWire / David Crosling

The case centred around a $37,450 donation made by Duong to the Royal Melbourne Hospital in June 2020 which was attended by then-federal minister Alan Tudge.

The donation, raised from members of Melbourne’s ethnic-Chinese community, was a “laudable” effort to assist healthcare workers and smooth tensions amid the Covid-19 pandemic on its face, the court was told.

But at the core of the effort, the jury found, was an attempt to cultivate a friendly relationship with the minister who Duong had described in tapped phone calls as “formidable” and a “future prime minister”.

Giving evidence, Alan Tudge told the jury he hoped to get positive media coverage of the donation at a time when the community was fearful of Covid-19. Picture: NCA NewsWire / David Crosling
Giving evidence, Alan Tudge told the jury he hoped to get positive media coverage of the donation at a time when the community was fearful of Covid-19. Picture: NCA NewsWire / David Crosling

Prosecutors, led by Patrick Doyle SC, argued that Duong had undeclared secret links to a Chinese Government agency running a worldwide influence operation – the United Front Work Department.

“The CCP, through the United Front system, runs a global program of influence directed, in large part, at the more than 40 million ethnic Chinese people living overseas,” he said.

“Seeking to persuade them it is in their interest to advance the agenda of the CCP.”

By involving Mr Tudge, Mr Doyle said, he was laying the groundwork for a relationship and possible future approach on behalf of the CCP.

The allegation can be put simple, Mr Duong’s decision to involve Alan Tudge was made with a view to approaching him in the future about matters of interest to the Chinese government,” he said.

“To be clear, there is nothing illegal about being associated with the Chinese Communist Party including the United Front.

“You’re entitled to lobby government but the disclosure that you are acting on someone’s behalf is critical.”

Duong, prosecutors argued, was charming, intelligent and knew “how to tap into people’s sympathies”.

Mr Duong (centre) with his barrister Peter Chadwick KC (right). Picture: NCA NewsWire / David Crosling
Mr Duong (centre) with his barrister Peter Chadwick KC (right). Picture: NCA NewsWire / David Crosling

His barrister, Peter Chadwick KC, had argued the donation was a genuine attempt to help frontline workers and his client “denied in the strongest possible terms, working with the United Front.

As a prominent leader in Melbourne’s Chinese community, he said Duong’s donation was raised “as part of his regular charitable work”.

Duong is the first person to be tried under Australia’s foreign interference laws, introduced by the then-Turnbull government in 2018.

The offence carries a maximum penalty of 10 years imprisonment.

He will return to court for a pre-sentence hearing at a later date.

Read related topics:China TiesCoronavirus
Liam Beatty
Liam BeattyJournalist

Liam Beatty is a court reporter with NCA NewsWire. He has previously worked in newsrooms in Victoria and Western Australia.

Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/breaking-news/di-sanh-sunny-duong-melbourne-businessman-found-guilty-of-plot-to-cultivate-alan-tudge-for-china/news-story/f3a13a71db5cba4ed49a7c77b3b87df3