Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison's account on Chinese-owned social media platform WeChat was taken over and renamed, a newspaper reported on Monday.
Morrison's 76,000 WeChat followers were notified his page had been renamed "Australian Chinese new life" earlier this month. The change was made without the government's knowledge, Sydney's The Daily Telegraph newspaper reported.
Morrison's office declined to comment on the report.
Joint Parliamentary Committee on Intelligence and Security Chair James Paterson accused the Chinese Communist Party of censoring the prime minister with 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 told Sydney Radio on 2GB.
"No politician should be on WeChat and legitimising their censorship," he added.
Paterson said it was concerning that 1.2 million (12 lakh) Chinese Australians who use the platform could not access news from the prime minister, but could still see criticisms of the government made by opposition leader Anthony Albanese.
Liberal Party lawmaker and former diplomat Dave Sharma said the interference was likely sanctioned by the Chinese government.
He said while Morrison used WeChat to connect with Australia's Chinese diaspora, the platform was ultimately 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 told Sky News television.
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.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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