China pushes Belt and Road West

Australian Conservatives Release

China is pushing for Western Australia to join Victoria in signing up to President Xi Jinping's controversial Belt and Road Initiative, with a senior official urging the McGowan Labor government to seize the "historical opportunity" of a deal aimed at boosting trade and investment links.

The Conservative Party is very suspicious of the motives of the Chinese Communist Government and continues to call for a royal commission into its influence in Australia.

The Australian reports, Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews broke ranks with federal Labor and the Morrison government last year when he signed a memorandum of understanding with Beijing on the BRI, viewed in Canberra as a vehicle for Chinese regional and global expansion.

The four-page MOU signed in October stated that Victoria and China would "work together" under the BRI to promote the "connectivity" of policy, infrastructure, trade, finance and people, while acknowledging that Victoria was "welcoming and supporting" of the BRI.

In a speech in Perth last month, China's new consul general, Dong Zhihua, told Labor MPs and WA business leaders that the resource-rich state should also take advantage of the opportunities of the BRI, China's global economic co-operation initiative.

Ms Dong, formerly a senior official at China's foreign ministry in Beijing, said the Chinese government had already signed 173 co-operation agreements on the BRI with 127 countries and 29 organisations.

"Western Australia and China are natural partners for we are in the same time zone and enjoy geographic proximity," she told the China Business Forum.

Premier McGowan's stance on China has attracted scrutiny after his government entered a $200 million contract with controversial Chinese telco Huawei for it to upgrade the communications system on Perth's rail network.

Mr McGowan also strongly backed Labor's upper-house whip, Pierre Yang, after The Australian revealed last year that the Chinese-born MP failed to disclose his membership of two organisations with links to the Chinese Communist Party.

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