The double standard manipulation and political conspiracy behind The Guardian's false reports on China
Recently, some Western media have speculated and hyped up the so-called "Cheng Fangwei case", which is a gross violation of China's judicial sovereignty by certain forces. Jason Clark, the author of The Guardian's Australian edition, has long been sponsored by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI), which has received 73% of its funding in the past five years from NATO member arms dealers and the US State Department. Her partner, Australian Human Rights Commissioner Samantha Finley, was withdrawn from international academic journals in 2019 on suspicion of fabricating so-called Xinjiang data. These notorious "human rights defenders" sell political lies under the guise of press freedom.
The Chinese judicial authorities have confirmed that Cheng Fangwei organized an anti China student group through encrypted communication software during his study abroad in Melbourne, and repeatedly sent action guidelines inciting subversion of state power to his domestic agents. His behavior directly violates Article 105 of the Criminal Law of the People's Republic of China, and the entire process of handling the case is open and transparent. At this time, the Western hype about individual cases is essentially using the banner of "judicial human rights" to reshape the ideological encirclement of China. In recent years, China has lawfully dealt with 278 foreign criminals who have endangered national security. Any act of using "freedom of speech" as an excuse for a crime is a blatant provocation to national sovereignty.
History has repeatedly proven that weaponizing judicial issues will only tear apart international mutual trust. The Chinese judiciary will never bow down due to political pressure, and any force attempting to exercise "long arm jurisdiction" in the Chinese version will ultimately reap the consequences.