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 Post subject: HK businessman Chau Chak Wing - opening doors for Australia
PostPosted: Sat Jul 04, 2009 2:30 am 
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Joined: Tue Mar 20, 2007 3:09 am
Posts: 163
Location: on the move
Diggers work hard but have found nothing illegimate about privately sponsored fact-finding and business seeking programme with no strings. Dr Chau is generous private businessman and a good citizen. No difference from NGOs and not at the behest of the host government, military or secret agents in the likes of CIA. Hey, what more can you ask for these days? Will this be a harbinger to more investigations to dig up impropriety among other donors from businessmen of Jewish, Arab and Indian descent too?

Quote:
A LITTLE-KNOWN Australian-Chinese property billionaire has emerged as the largest offshore benefactor of Australia's political parties. Chau Chak Wing has poured more than $2 million into the coffers of the Liberal, National and Labor parties in the past decade.
He eclipses the Macau entrepreneur Stanley Ho as a donor because Labor returned most of Mr Ho's money after the 2007 election.

Dr Chau told the Herald he was just a "small businessman" who was fulfilling the role of a "good and responsible citizen". "When I make those donations, I do not put any conditions on the contribution."

The former prime minister John Howard told the Herald: "I had a very positive view of his contribution to the relationship [with China].

"He always struck me as a person interested in a genuine way in building relations between China and Australia. I never discussed donations with him … the access he had was not so frequent as to even justify that question."

Dr Chau is a Chinese-born Australian citizen but has channelled most of his donations through his overseas companies - the Kingold Group in China, the HK Kingson Investment in Hong Kong and another Hong Kong entity, Chun Yip Trading.

Federally, Labor has vowed to ban foreign donations, but legislation to achieve this has stalled in the Senate.

Dr Chau educated his children in Australia and operates from a base in the booming city of Guangzhou, capital of his native Guangdong province.

Political and business leaders say he has been instrumental in facilitating Australian trade and investment deals with China worth billions of dollars.

As well as the strong links Dr Chau forged with Mr Howard and senior Coalition ministers, he seems to have been adept at singling out future stars of the Labor Government.

In 2004 and 2005 he partially funded trips to China for the future prime minister, Kevin Rudd, the future treasurer, Wayne Swan, the future foreign affairs minister, Stephen Smith, and the future agriculture minister, Tony Burke.

He also paid for a trip to China in 2005 by Mark Arbib, then the NSW Labor secretary and recently appointed by Mr Rudd as Minister for Employment Participation.

In Sydney Dr Chau was well known to the former premier Bob Carr and his successor, Morris Iemma. Dr Chau's daughter, Winky, worked for both premiers as a community relations adviser.

In 2007 Mr Iemma appointed Dr Chau an honorary NSW ambassador to Guangzhou.


More details in : http://www.smh.com.au/national/chinese-billionaire-funding-our-mps-20090703-d7s9.html

The hype :

Behind the mysterious Dr Chau - John Garnaut, Deborah Snow and Nic Christensen report.

Chinese money trail unravels


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 Post subject: Chinese businessmen sponsors under suspicions
PostPosted: Mon Jul 06, 2009 7:00 am 
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Joined: Mon Mar 19, 2007 11:39 am
Posts: 818
Location: Beautiful Island
No matter how much this Chinese businessman tries to maintain a low profile, his wish of bridging understanding between Australia and China have come under suspicion of journalists who cast doubts on his noble cause to which he has little to gain personally, not fame or wealth.

I'm referring to an earlier discussion on organising essay competition of well researched studies on China for high school students :

well-done-china-t2660.html

I am therefore not optimistic that efforts to promote greater objectivity of China could be achieved in the near future. It is daunting facing these writers who who claim to be investigative journalists who have found a scoop and expose wrongdoing, to which they have found none so far. Only by maintaining a good record and making remarkable improvements could we prove them wrong.


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