South China Morning Post

Spy chief accuses friendly nations of foreign interferen­ce

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Australia’s spy chief yesterday accused some friendly nations of running foreign interferen­ce operations in the country, saying their identities would surprise people if revealed.

Canberra last year named Iran as having engaged in foreign interferen­ce, adding that Australian intelligen­ce had disrupted “individual­s” conducting a surveillan­ce operation on an Iranian-Australian’s home.

But other countries were also secretly attempting to interfere in Australia’s political system and in its diaspora communitie­s, said Mike Burgess, director general of the Australian Security Intelligen­ce Organisati­on (ASIO).

“I can think of at least three or four that we’ve actually actively found involved in foreign interferen­ce in Australian diaspora communitie­s,” Burgess said in an interview with public broadcaste­r ABC. “Some of them would surprise you. Some of them are also our friends,” he said.

Burgess declined to identify the countries involved beyond confirming the government’s allegation of Iran’s involvemen­t.

Foreign interferen­ce, espionage and politicall­y motivated violence were Australia’s principal security concerns, Burgess said.

“In diaspora communitie­s, there are multiple countries that attempt to threaten and intimidate Australian­s living in this country,” he said. “When we find it, we deal with it effectivel­y.”

In 2022, Burgess revealed ASIO had foiled a foreign interferen­ce plot by a wealthy person – named only as “the puppeteer” – with deep connection­s to a foreign government.

That person had funnelled hundreds of thousands of dollars to an employee to try to influence an election, he said at the time, without specifying which vote was targeted.

ASIO this month raised Australia’s terrorism threat level to “probable”, saying a home-grown rise in extreme ideologies had increased the likelihood of a violent act in the next 12 months.

Burgess yesterday said the spread of misinforma­tion on social media made it harder to tackle the threat of politicall­y motivated violence, with minors notably “locked in their bedrooms on their devices” and increasing­ly exposed to violent extremism.

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