Tom writes,

>> .. How seriously does any country respect our Australian
>>    sovereignty if they open-up secret police stations here?
>
> This is not a matter of respect. When it comes to international
> relations, there is only self interest: if you can get away with it, you
> do it. Countries routinely carry out espionage on, and operations in,
> both their allies and enemies. If Australia is not happy with what
> another country is doing on its territory, then it can close down the
> operation ...

Yes well, they tried to do it in America also ..

April 17th, 2023   
https://www.nextgov.com/cybersecurity/2023/04/us-officials-charge-chinese-agents-running-secret-police-station-nyc/385282/


A “secret police station” in New York City has been run by the Chinese National 
Police as a base to harass Chinese dissidents living in the U.S.

It also worked with a troll farm and at least one employee at a U.S.-based 
company to disrupt online conversations and shut down video conferences, 
according to charges announced Monday by U.S. prosecutors from New York and 
Washington, D.C.

The secret police station—which posed as an outreach center established to help 
Chinese immigrants newly arrived in America—was closed last year after police 
identified the outfit operating out of Chinatown in lower Manhattan.

The Justice Department and FBI announced Monday the arrest of two individuals 
who operated the station, along with a slew of charges against non-U.S.-based 
Chinese nationals operating online.

“Whether through these physical or virtual means, these crimes created real 
effects for victims in the United States, victims whose rights the Department 
of Justice is committed to protecting,” said David Newman, DOJ principal deputy 
assistant attorney general for national security.

According to prosecutors, trolls working with the Chinese National Police would 
join online meetings, blasting loud music, making specific threats and 
otherwise disrupting the streams until the groups were forced to disband.

In at least one case, Chinese law enforcement allegedly worked directly with a 
Zoom employee to shut down video conferences.

Xinjiang Jin—also known as Julien Jin, the former Zoom employee who acted as a 
liaison between the company and the Chinese government—was charged in December 
2020 with using his position to disrupt online meetings in remembrance of the 
1989 Tiananmen Square incident, in which the People’s Republic of China 
murdered hundreds of protesting citizens.

“In crashing and disrupting these online meetings, the NPS subjected these 
Chinese dissidents living here in the United States to the authoritarian rule 
of the PRC,” Breon Peace, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York, 
said.  “That is unacceptable.”

Prosecutors announced charges Monday against an additional 10 Chinese nationals 
in connection with those incidents.

“This fact pattern … underscores the insider threat risk facing any U.S. 
company that does business in China and has employees based in China,” Newman 
said.

U.S. attorneys also announced charges against 34 Chinese nationals—all working 
for the National Police’s 912 Special Projects Working Group—as part of a troll 
farm operating on social media platforms to track and harass dissidents and 
drown out criticisms of the Chinese government with propaganda and 
disinformation.

“Among other items, the official PRC disinformation suggested the weakness of 
U.S. democracy and foreign policy; sought to sow political divisions in U.S. 
national elections; and conveyed conspiracy theories regarding the U.S. 
government’s alleged responsibility for the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic,” 
Peace said.

“It shows the PRC’s efforts to globalize the oppressive tactics used 
domestically in China to silence dissent,” Newman said
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