男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影

Australia 'biting the hand' of China

By Ho Chi-ping ( HK Edition )

Updated: 2013-07-04

A recent survey by the Lowy Research Institute in Sydney has cast light on an extraordinary contradiction in how Australians apparently view China, which buys 15 percent of their exports and is their biggest customer.

In spite of this, 41 percent of those polled thought it was likely that China would become a "military threat" to Australia in the next 20 years! Factors influencing respondents into this self-contradictory conclusion included ongoing media hype over China's involvement in territorial disputes in the South China Sea, plus China's supposed international cyber hacking - since dramatically negated by former National Security Agency analyst Edward Snowden's revelations about the United States being the guilty party.

On top of this, 57 percent believed Australia was allowing "too much investment from China". Obviously, few bothered to check the facts before expressing such negative opinions. The latest statistics show Chinese investment in Australia now stands at just 3 percent of the total of direct foreign investment in the country, and that China is ninth on the list of direct foreign investors in Australia.

How did Australians get such a horribly skewed views regarding China? For the source of such rubbish, we need only look at the Australian media, which makes headline news out of any Chinese territorial claims, however justifiable, and closely follows all Chinese investments it can uncover. Apparently, the explanation is that "it sells papers and improves ratings". Yes, but what of the damage it does to relations between Beijing and Canberra?

If all this isn't harmful enough, let us now turn to a subject that Australians are still more sensitive about - ownership of Australian farmland. No fewer than 81 percent of respondents said they were opposed to allowing "any foreign country" being allowed to buy Australian farmland.

Australia 'biting the hand' of China

Alex Oliver, who directed the Lowy survey, said the issue of who should own Australian farmland "hits right at the identity of Australia as a farming nation, an agricultural power harking back to its wool and beef trade." Kerry Brown, executive director of the China Studies Center at the University of Sydney, supplemented: "These concerns about Chinese companies buying into the Australian agricultural sector are valid inasmuch as Chinese companies must do more themselves to shift these misunderstandings and misconceptions about their ownership."

Also, to show the actual situation in a clearer light, the Australian headquarters of the international accountancy giant, KPMG, brought out a report in March titled "Demystifying Chinese Investment in Australia." It clearly shows that most overseas investment in Australia is involved with mining, natural gas and energy, though it found that secondary investment is following a global trend by diversifying into Australian agriculture and real estate.

These highly disturbing findings of the survey suggest that - if the respondents truly represent current thinking across the country - Australians are still living back in the 1960s, when the White Australia policy was still being used to bar Asians from entry as migrants.

The poll was done about the time that Australia was reading in the press and watching on TV supposedly "reliable reports" that Chinese hackers had stolen the plans for Australia's new security headquarters in Canberra. This multi-storey complex in Australia's national capital will itself eventually house an extended staff of computer geeks, but what their specific duties will remain to be seen. One thing is certain - Australians would never tolerate US-style mass eavesdropping on their computer and phone communications, nor would the 142 foreign embassies located in Canberra.

No doubt these "scare stories" about Chinese hacking of Australian institutions and individuals explain why the Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei was banned from tendering for government contracts for Australia's National Broadband Network - yet another unjustified slap in the face for Beijing.

Meanwhile, there has just been a change of personnel in Australia's top job. Former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has just regained his old post. A fluent Mandarin speaker, Rudd should quickly set in motion measures to rectify many of the grossly inaccurate Australian impressions of China. At risk is no less than A$110.5 billion ($100.3 billion) in annual exports to China of coal and iron ore and concentrates - plus, of course, the Chinese goodwill Australia presently enjoys.

The author is vice-chairman and secretary-general of the China Energy Fund Committee, an independent think tank on China and energy-related issues.

(HK Edition 07/04/2013 page9)

Schedule

President Xi to visit Indonesia, Malaysia, attend APEC summit

Oct 2 to 3: Pay State Visit to Indonesia

Oct 4 to 5: Pay State Visit to Malaysia

Oct 6 to 8: Attend the 21st economic leaders' meeting of APEC forum and meet with global leaders in Bali, Indonesia

主站蜘蛛池模板: 家居| 诸城市| 沙田区| 偃师市| 江陵县| 文成县| 区。| 贡觉县| 定边县| 河间市| 夏津县| 宁都县| 乌什县| 博白县| 鹤山市| 勃利县| 九龙县| 彭泽县| 平乐县| 广昌县| 安龙县| 庐江县| 浦东新区| 衡水市| 加查县| 武强县| 吴堡县| 固始县| 阿巴嘎旗| 吐鲁番市| 同江市| 剑川县| 嘉兴市| 瑞丽市| 高州市| 鞍山市| 扎囊县| 翁源县| 耒阳市| 砚山县| 内乡县| 兰坪| 方城县| 甘德县| 连云港市| 调兵山市| 四子王旗| 枣庄市| 白山市| 黄石市| 高州市| 定结县| 溧水县| 本溪市| 兰考县| 上虞市| 西青区| 斗六市| 日土县| 永平县| 太保市| 许昌市| 石楼县| 肥城市| 固阳县| 苍溪县| 股票| 贺州市| 西昌市| 莱西市| 苍山县| 祁连县| 江北区| 乌鲁木齐市| 广德县| 朝阳区| 瓮安县| 陇西县| 新干县| 秦安县| 河北省| 九龙坡区|