Millions of people of Chinese origin are nationals of countries other than China and they donāt back Beijing.
In late February, 59-year-old Phillip Chan Man Ping became the first person in Singapore to be officially designated a āpolitically significant personā.
The city-stateās authorities had already announced that Chan had āshown susceptibility to being influenced by foreign actors, and willingness to advance their interestsā and that Chanās activities āwere directed towards a political end in Singaporeā making it in the public interest for ācountermeasuresā to be taken.
ā¦
āAs he openly called on overseas Chinese to tell Chinaās story well, he also attempted to blur the distinction between Chinese nationals and non-China nationals of Chinese descent,ā Loh said.
āAnd I think that most countries will find it unacceptable to have its own citizens working for a foreign actor to exert influence that might work against the interests of your country.ā
ā¦
According to Associate Professor Ian Chong Ja, who teaches Chinese foreign policy at the National University of Singapore, Xiās language suggests that the CCP sees ethnic Chinese across the world as a vehicle to mobilise support and advance Beijingās interests, even if those people are not nationals of China and have no allegiance to the country.
Identity politics arenāt dead to the CCP, so they arenāt dead.
That statement is in no way, shape, or form a defense of the CCP.