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The court in Sydney where Australian man Alexander Csergo appeared by video link after being charged with foreign interference. Photo: Reuters

Australian accused of helping Chinese spies had intelligence ‘shopping list’, court hears

  • Alexander Csergo is accused of accepting cash-filled envelopes from intelligence agents in return for writing reports on Australia
  • He ‘became very worried’ about the agents – known only as ‘Ken’ and ‘Evelyn’ – while he was living in Shanghai, his lawyer told a Sydney court
Australia
An Australian businessman has been refused bail after being charged with a foreign interference offence for accepting cash from suspected Chinese intelligence agents, with a Sydney court saying his close ties to China made him a flight risk.
Alexander Csergo is alleged to have arrived back in Australia this year with a “shopping list” of intelligence priorities he had been asked for by two people he had suspected since 2021 to be agents for China’s Ministry of State Security, the court heard. The pair, named in court only as “Ken” and “Evelyn”, first made contact with Csergo through LinkedIn.

Magistrate Michael Barko said Alexander Csergo was a “sophisticated, worldly business-person” who had been on the radar of Australian intelligence for some time before his arrest on Friday.

The prosecution had a strong case against Csergo, who had lived in China for decades, Barko said in refusing bail.

Alexander Csergo became “very worried” about two suspected intelligence agents while he was living in Shanghai, his lawyer said. Photo: Bloomberg
Csergo had been allegedly asked to handwrite reports about Australia’s Aukus defence technology partnership with the United States and Britain, the Quad diplomatic partnership, iron ore and lithium mining, Barko said.

A marketing executive, Csergo, 55, was arrested in the beachside suburb of Bondi on Friday. He is the second person charged under Australia’s foreign interference law, which criminalises activity that helps a foreign power interfere with Australia’s sovereignty or national interest. It carries a maximum 15 year prison sentence.

Csergo appeared in court via video link from Parklea Prison where he is being held as a high security prisoner. His mother and brother were in court.

Csergo had told Australian intelligence agents in an interview that when he met Ken and Evelyn in Shanghai cafes and restaurants, the establishments had been empty and he suspected they had been cleared, Barko said.

Australian man who lived in China arrested for ‘foreign interference’

He developed a high level of anxiety and was in “survival mode”, he had told the Australian authorities.

Csergo had exchanged around 3,300 WeChat messages with the pair, and had accepted cash payments in envelopes, Barko said.

Barko raised concerns for Csergo’s safety, saying some people may not want him to give evidence against China.

Csergo’s lawyer, Bernard Collaery, had sought bail, saying the reports Csergo had written were based on publicly sourced information and the case against his client was “shallow and unsubstantiated”.

Alexander Csergo had worked in China since 2002 in data marketing, including for a major international advertising agency. Photo: LinkedIn

Prosecutor Conor McCraith disputed this, saying it was not all open source because he had engaged covertly with two others to prepare reports. He also said Csergo had not come to Australian authorities with his concerns about Ken and Evelyn, and had instead invited Ken to come to Australia.

Collaery said making cash payments was a common business practice in China.

“Of course he believed Ken and Evelyn were keeping tabs on him. That’s how it works in China, he became very worried about it,” Collaery said.

Csergo had worked in China since 2002 in data marketing, including for a major international advertising agency.

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Collaery said Csergo’s career had come “tumbling down” since his arrest, he had no intention to return to China and instead planned to pursue the Australian government for damages for ruining his career.

Collaery told media outside the court the case was a “civil liberties” issue and raised concerns about the scope of the foreign interference law introduced in 2018.

“If you work as a consultant in any foreign country … and you undertake consulting work that may relate to Australia’s foreign influences or national security, such as articles on the supply of lithium or iron ore … you can be guilty of foreign interference,” he told reporters.

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