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Morrison’s office declined to comment on the report.
Joint Parliamentary Committee on Intelligence and Security Chair James Paterson said WeChat has not replied to an Australian government request that the prime minister’s account be restored.
Paterson accused the Chinese Communist Party of censoring the prime minister with Australia’s elections due by May.
Paterson, who is a member of Morrison’s conservative Liberal Party, called on all lawmakers to boycott the platform, which is owned by Chinese technology giant Tencent.
“What the Chinese government has done by shutting down an Australian account is foreign interference of Australian democracy in an election year,” Paterson said.
Paterson said it was concerning that 1.2 million Chinese Australians who use the platform couldn’t access news from the prime minister, but could still see criticisms of the government made by opposition leader Anthony Albanese.
Fergus Ryan, an Australian Strategic Policy Institute Chinese social media expert, tweeted that Morrison was one of at least a dozen Australian politicians who use WeChat accounts now registered to Chinese citizens.
Liberal Party lawmaker and former diplomat Dave Sharma said the interference was likely sanctioned by the Chinese government.
Sharma said Morrison used WeChat to connect with Australia’s Chinese diaspora. But ultimately social media are controlled by the Chinese Communist Party.
“More likely than not it was state-sanctioned and it shows the attitude towards free speech and freedom of expression that comes out of Beijing,” Sharma said.
Graeme Smith, a China expert at the Australian National University, said Morrison’s account was registered to a Chinese national in China’s Fujian province.
“It’s not the most difficult thing to hack an account within China,” Smith told Australian Broadcasting Corp.
“I don’t think we know who’s behind this. I dare say we could safely say it was at least inspired by the China government,” Smith added.
Smith said he did not believe that Morrison’s WeChat problem was evidence that China would back Albanese’s center-left Labor Party at the next election.
“They really couldn’t care less who wins the election,” Smith said. “They don’t care who wins as long as people don’t trust democracy.”
Albanese told Brisbane Radio 4BC he would talk to Morrison about “any national security implications” of the prime minister’s WeChat problem.
Morrison has had a vexed relationship with China since he replaced Malcolm Turnbull as prime minister in 2018.
The Chinese have been critical of a new partnership involving Australia, Britain and the United States announced in September under which Australia will be provided with nuclear-powered submarines.
Australian prime minister loses control of WeChat account (msn.com)