In a move that underscores Canberra’s growing cybersecurity concerns, the Zhao Leji-led Chinese delegation prompted the Department of Parliamentary Services to issue an internal email instructing MPs, senators and parliamentary staff to power down mobile phones, tablets and laptops, disable Wi-Fi and Bluetooth modules, and even shut blinds and doors during parts of the visit by the third-ranking official of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). The precautionary measures reflect fears of state-sponsored cyber intrusion and espionage, with Australia’s external intelligence agency having previously warned of Chinese hacking groups targeting critical infrastructure. The visit, which saw Zhao meet senior Australian leadership including Anthony Albanese and Sam Mostyn, was accompanied by visible protest activity as Tibetan and Uyghur groups rallied outside Parliament House while pro-China flags were displayed by other attendees.
Sources: Epoch Times, Sky News
Key Takeaways
– National security concerns have escalated to the point where even legislative chambers are instructed to shut down electronic devices during foreign state-visits, highlighting the perceived risk from foreign cyber-actors.
– The instructions to disable Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and close office blinds suggest a recognition of multi-vector threats—including audio/video surveillance and wireless infiltration—not just conventional hacking.
– The symbolic timing of the visit—under heavy security and protest spotlight—signals that Australia is actively balancing diplomatic engagement with Beijing against the risks posed by China’s broader intelligence and influence operations.
In-Depth
Australia’s Parliament has seldom seen security directives quite like the one recently circulated by the Department of Parliamentary Services. In effect, MPs and staff were told to power down their mobile phones, tablets and laptops, disable wireless connectivity, draw blinds, shut doors and even expect intermittent Wi-Fi disruptions as the Chinese delegation led by Zhao Leji walked the halls of Parliament House. While at first glance this may appear to be simple protocol for a VIP visit, the specifics suggest a considerably more serious underlying concern: that foreign cyber-actors may target the very heart of Australian democracy.
Zhao Leji, the chairman of China’s National People’s Congress Standing Committee and the third-ranking official in the Chinese Communist Party, arrived in Australia for high-level meetings with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Governor-General Sam Mostyn and parliamentary leaders. The heavy-handed security advisory issued ahead of his visit did not explicitly name the threat, but the language is unmistakable. The requirement to “power down” internet-connected devices, disable Bluetooth and Wi-Fi, and restrict movement in and around certain corridors reflects clear awareness of multi-faceted digital vulnerabilities: the potential for wireless activation of listening devices, camera hacks, Bluetooth-enabled infiltration, and interception of sensitive communications.
Australia’s top spy agency has previously confirmed that Chinese cyber-espionage campaigns target not only industry and infrastructure but also democratic institutions and parliamentary systems. By instructing MPs and parliamentary staff to essentially go dark during the visit, the government is acknowledging a high-stakes cyber environment where even a device as innocuous as a smartphone could serve as an entry point for foreign intelligence. The fact this directive was marked “sensitive — do not distribute” underlines the seriousness with which officials view the threat.
The optics of the visit were also charged: while Zhao toured Brisbane’s energy sector and a koala sanctuary, in Canberra hours later, duelling protests unfolded — one group waving Chinese flags, another composed of Tibetan, Uyghur and Falun Gong supporters calling attention to human-rights abuses in China. Against that backdrop of diplomatic engagement, alleged espionage risk and public protest, the advisory to shut down devices assumes a broader meaning. It suggests that Australia is not merely welcoming a major Chinese official, but bracing for possible digital intrusion at the highest levels.
In essence, the visit and the associated device-lockdown both reflect Australia’s evolving posture toward China: one of cautious engagement, but underpinned by growing skepticism of Beijing’s intelligence footprint. For MPs, staff and lobbyists inside Parliament House, the message is now clear: when a foreign power visits, the threat isn’t just foreign diplomats—it may be foreign hackers, listening devices or compromised firmware mingling unnoticed among the hardware in the room. The prophylactic steps, unseen by most citizens, may become a new normal when high-stakes state-visits occur in an age of digital vulnerability.
Should this become a recurring theme, it raises broader questions for democratic governance: How do parliaments protect internal deliberations when every smartphone can be a Trojan horse? How do democratic states host foreign dignitaries without opening themselves to surveillance or compromise? In Australia’s case, the precautionary shutdown is a clear statement: even in diplomacy there is distrust, even in hospitality there is risk, and even in democracy there is exposure.

