Friday, February 3, 2017

Tracking Andrew Robb-An open source intelligence project.

by Ganesh Sahathevan


Hon. Andrew Robb MP
The Hon Andrew Robb AO

It is the right of every Australian to be made aware of what politicians and former politicians do ,especially where it involves representing a foreign country's interests. Former trade minister Andrew Robb is a good example  of a politician who has effectively gone to work for the Chinese Government , after rushing  Australia into a "free trade agreement " with China, despite the evidence that China was highly unlikely to play free or fair.

Thankfully for the rest of Australia the internet has enabled fast and free access to government and quasi-government databases which can tell us what present and past politicians are up to in the name of self-interest. Tracking their movements has become easy, and can provide insights into what they are doing which may harm the national interest. Provided below are references to Robb's movements, and the intention is to provide updates as and when information becomes available.
Readers are welcome to add to what is provided here via the comments section.

END 

Andrew Robb and Associates

Andrew Robb provides boutique investment, trade and major projects counsel for companies and organisation's globally, with a focus on the Asia-Pacific region.
The Melbourne and Sydney offices of the firm are located 
at the premises of Ellerston Capital, which was once  the Packer family's investment fund.

Andrew Robb Pty Ltd
C/- Ellerston Capital
Level 4, 75-77 Flinders Lane
Melbourne, VIC, 3000, Australia.
Tel: +61 2 9021 7776


Sydney

Andrew Robb Pty Ltd
C/- Ellerston Capital
Level 11, 179 Elizabeth Street
Sydney, NSW, 2000, Australia.
Tel: +61 2 9021 777

Robb is on the advisory board of the Australia-China One Belt Road promotion  initiative, but has not disclosed, in keeping what appears to be Chinese Government policy , that the OBOR includes Darwin.He did not disclose this fact even when his OBOR activities were publicly criticized,and he certainly did not disclose the fact when he was recruited by Landmark, the Chinese Government owned company that now owns Darwin Port.




Andrew Robb under fire for pushing China's One Belt One Road policy

Andrew Robb led a delegation of Australian government officials to Beijing to convince them of the benefits of Chinese ...
Andrew Robb led a delegation of Australian government officials to Beijing to convince them of the benefits of Chinese President Xi Jinping's signature strategic "One Belt One Road" policy last week. People.cn
Former trade minister Andrew Robb, who has been criticised for taking a job with Darwin Port owners Landbridge, led a delegation of Australian government officials to Beijing to convince them of the benefits of Chinese President Xi Jinping's signature strategic "One Belt One Road" policy last week.
Mr Robb has been accused of possibly breaching ministerial standards by Labor and the Greens for becoming an economic adviser with Chinese company Landbridge so soon after retiring from politics.
Landbridge's Darwin Port interests and the One Belt One Road policy are intertwined.
Landbridge head Ye Cheng has previously said the company's investment in the Northern Territory port helped serve the Chinese strategic and foreign policy goal, also known as the "Maritime Silk Road", enthusiastically touted by Chinese leaders as a way to connect China with Europe via Central Asia via massive Chinese investment in new infrastructure projects.
Landbridge head Ye Cheng, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Andrew Robb in Beijing in April.
Landbridge head Ye Cheng, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Andrew Robb in Beijing in April. Landbridge
Sceptics say the policy it is an attempt by Beijing to create a strategic bloc to counter the influence of the United States.
Mr Xi has called for the Australian government's Northern Development Strategy to be included in the initiative, which the Chinese government say is worth billions.
Mr Robb helped launch and is on the advisory board of the organisation that arranged last week's China trip – the Australia China One Belt One Road Initiative – in May when he was still Trade Envoy, along with former Victorian Labor premier John Brumby.
The statement of ministerial standards says ministers cannot lobby or advocate on behalf of private enterprises with the government for 18 months after they step down "on any matters on which they have had official dealings as minister".
Mr Robb's Landbridge appointment was announced by the company on September 2, six months after he stepped down as trade minister. He was then a Trade Envoy until the election on July 2.
Mr Robb led a delegation of officials and business people to China last week.
Mr Robb led a delegation of officials and business people to China last week. Xinhua

'Standards breach'

Labor and the Greens have suggested Mr Robb may have breached ministerial standards if he was advocating on behalf of Landbridge to the government.
The opposition has also questioned whether he may be taking personal advantage of privileged information he had access to as a minister.
"Malcolm Turnbull needs to make absolutely, absolutely clear how he has set about ensuring that Mr Robb doesn't use sensitive information gathered while he was a minister of the Crown, in order to benefit himself and his client," Labor's assistant treasurer Andrew Leigh said.
Mr Robb was approached for comment but did not respond before deadline.
The United States was "stunned" that Australia allowed Landbridge, with high-level government links, to take out a 99-year lease for the Port of Darwin last October.
Furore over the lease saw Treasurer Scott Morrison beef up the expertise on the Foreign Investment Review Board and extend its remit to cover more sales by state and territory governments. But Defence insisted it had no security concerns about the lease.
The delegation led by Mr Robb included Austrade, Victorian government officials, representatives from the Business Council of Australia, ANZ, CBA, King & Wood, Mallesons, Minter Ellison, NAB, BHP Billiton, Norman Disney & Young, Orica, Worley Parsons and SMEC.
Chinese media reported that the Australian delegation agreed to co-operate further on integrating Australia into the One Belt One Road scheme.
The Chinese official charged with the Western expansion of the One Belt One Road policy, Ou Xiaoli, who comes under Chinese government's central economic planning ministry and under the Chinese State Council, has endorsed the organisation.
When talking up foreign companies providing key investment in infrastructure last year, Mr Robb name-dropped Landbridge.
Members of the defence community, some of whom opposed the lease of the Darwin Port, have said Mr Robb's appointment appeared "cosy".
Mr Turnbull met Landbridge's Mr Ye with Mr Robb in Beijing in April when he was invited to attend a China-Australia CEO roundtable.
Some companies in Australia have already embraced the One Belt One Road policy. In May, a new Chinese-Australian venture set up a triangular shipping route from Rizhao in China (where Landbridge is also based), to Brisbane, Sydney, Bell Bay, Melbourne, Fremantle and return.
Mr Robb has previously said the organisation was about ensuring Australia got a slice of the One Belt One Road investment action.
"We are the first delegation of commercial operators [to visit China for One Belt One Road]. We need more investment from Australian companies not just in China but right across Asia," he said.
"The idea behind the delegation is to identify the big companies involved in OBOR and then build a relationship with them," he told The Australian Financial Review.


Read more: http://www.afr.com/news/andrew-robb-under-fire-for-pushing-chinas-one-belt-one-road-policy-20161031-gservn#ixzz4Xfk5LE8g 
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Thursday, February 2, 2017

A deal is a deal: Turnbull, Payne and Pyne can expect scrutiny of that DCNS deal-It is in the interest of the US to do so

by Ganesh Sahathevan


Mr Pyne and the boss of DCNS, Herve Guillou, visit the shipyards in Cherbourg.
Mr Pyne and the boss of DCNS, Herve Guillou, visit the shipyards in Cherbourg.

The Malcolm Turnbull, Christopher Pyne and Marise Payne AUD 50  billion deal with DCNS of France smells for many , many reason, not least given DCNS's history of corruption.

This writer has previously noted that it is in the interest of the United States to have the DCNS deal investigated, and to have Australia lease the US's Virginia class submarines, immediately:
Dump compromised DCNS Barracudas, lease US Virginias: A simple commercial arrangement that will keep Trump engaged in the defence of this

Trump' calling  Turnbull's Nauru deal "dumb" comes after Turnbull thought he could corner Trump by having that deal concluded with Obama,. It also comes after Turnbull declared that he ,and especially he, could replace the US with China in the TPPA.

Turnbull can now expect, if not already, every deal he has entered into to come under extreme vetting.
END 



Reference 




Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Payne's admission requires investigation of submarine contracts: Is l'affaire Adelaide a repeat of DCNS's l'affaire Karachi?



by Ganesh Sahathevan

Australian Defence Minsiter Marise Payne protested on ABC last night that her boyfriend's "attempt" at contacting DCNS in Paris just a week before she announced DCNS as winner of the Competitive Evaluation Process for AUD 50 billion contract for the construction of 12 submarines, was nothing more than what any trade minister would do as part of the Process. 
In Payne's words ::


MARISE PAYNE: No. I understand that that is part of a series of meetings that any Trade Minister from Australia from any state in the Commonwealth, frankly, would endeavour to have with participants in the CEP (Competitive Evaluation Process) process.

As explained in the previous post :
The CEP was basically a fashion parade, so it is hard to see why there was any need for anyone to seek a meeting with any  bidder

unless it was to provide assistance with the bidding process.

Payne has , in effect ,admitted that there has been at least an attempt to do so  by her boyfriend, Stuart Ayres. This would not of course be the first time that DCNS has managed to combine elections, election funding ,and a contract for submarines.
l'affaire Karachi is yet to be resolved.
END 

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

A dumb deal- Turnbull pays the price for trying to play China against the US,and for Keshik Capital



by Ganesh Sahathevan

In one fell swoop, a strike on Obama and Turnbull



Do you believe it? The Obama Administration agreed to take thousands of illegal immigrants from Australia. Why? I will study this dumb deal!
This should not be unexpected,.The US has for a long time been concerned about Malcolm Turnbull's China leanings. Turnbull, as usual , overestimated his standing in the world pecking order, attempting to be some sort of deal maker for China against the US. 


As reported on this blog, the Turnbull family's business interests may be a factor in Turnbull's favouring China See :
Crouching (Turn)Bull, Hidden Rabbit Part 5-Election result means no more Asian favours, the end of Keshik Capital, and the unraveling of the Turnbull empire.

EN D
Reference


Is Malcolm Turnbull 'soft' on China 

because of his family connections?


Alex Turnbull, son of the new Prime Minister, has knocked down "absurd" claims that intelligence agencies are concerned about the family background of his Chinese-born wife.
The younger Mr Turnbull has told Fairfax Media he cannot make sense of claims reported on Tuesday that Australian and American spies are worried about his father's "soft" China policies and his wife being the "princeling" child of senior Communist Party officials.


"Malcolm has had a healthy scepticism for the intelligence community," wrote Christopher Joye in the Australian Financial Review.
"This is reciprocated in spades with Australian and US spooks insinuating Malcolm is soft on national security and the China threat while noting his Sinophile son is married to the princeling daughter of senior Chinese Communist Party officials."
The author, Mr Joye, is a fund manager who has known the Turnbull family for decades and has written extensively on Western counter-intelligence and Chinese cyber-espionage.
But Mr Joye's claims about senior party ties are "utter rubbish", according to Alex Turnbull.
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"It's a pity Chris was so busy he could not be bothered to clear up basic biographical information, especially as he has my phone number," he said.
The AFR removed the word "princeling" from the online story yesterday and Mr Joye declined to comment.
Alex Turnbull, 33, worked at Goldman Sachs before joining a private equity firm in Singapore. In 2012 he married Yvonne Wang, or Wang Yi Wen, who works as a public relations adviser for Trip Advisor.
They had their first child, Isla, in May.
Her parents were well-connected in cosmopolitan Shanghai and were known to be on good terms with former president Jiang Zemin. But they did not hold any senior party or military rank.
Ms Wang's mother, Tu Chongling, was a Canadian music graduate who died in July, aged 78. Ms Wang's father, Wang Chunming, was an international relations scholar.
He was born into a "capitalist" family in Ningbo, Zhejiang, and fled to the United States before being chased back again by McCarthyism in the 1950s.
Mr Wang returned to China to spend the better part of a decade tending pigs in the Cultural Revolution, and then worked with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. 
Mr Wang is 91 years old and in poor health.