Lisa Visentin | WAtoday

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Lisa Visentin is the North Asia correspondent for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age. She was previously a federal political reporter based in Canberra.

Wong says ‘rules are being bent, twisted and broken’ but avoids naming China as key actor

Wong says ‘rules are being bent, twisted and broken’ but avoids naming China as key actor

Australia US, India and Japan have called out Beijing’s aggression in the South China Sea and cyber espionage but stopped short of naming China directly.

  • by Lisa Visentin

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Parts of Japan ‘likely to vanish’ as population shrinks

Parts of Japan ‘likely to vanish’ as population shrinks

Japan’s population has recorded its biggest single-year decrease in history, falling by 861,000 people, as the government grapples with measures to reverse the trend.

  • by Lisa Visentin
Australia refuses to match allies sanctioning China over support for Russian war

Australia refuses to match allies sanctioning China over support for Russian war

The UK, US and the EU are among those sanctioning Chinese companies accused of helping Russia wreak havoc in Ukraine. The Albanese government is an outlier.

  • by Lisa Visentin
This fairytale village in ruins symbolises state of China’s economy

This fairytale village in ruins symbolises state of China’s economy

These days the abandoned ruins stand as a mausoleum to Evergrande’s rapacious ambitions and a symbol of the sickness plaguing the real estate market.

  • by Lisa Visentin
Mission improbable: My race to Saipan for a date with history

Mission improbable: My race to Saipan for a date with history

I was woken by a phone message from my editor: could I get to a remote Pacific archipelago within 24 hours in time for Julian Assange’s plea hearing?

  • by Lisa Visentin
‘Nothing to be ashamed of’: Lawyers defiant as Assange heads to Australia

‘Nothing to be ashamed of’: Lawyers defiant as Assange heads to Australia

The WikiLeaks founder’s conviction has put journalists around the world at risk of imprisonment for doing their jobs, Julian Assange’s lawyers have warned.

  • by Matthew Knott and Lisa Visentin
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The dark footnote in the history of tiny island where Assange was freed
Analysis
Assange saga

The dark footnote in the history of tiny island where Assange was freed

After 14 years, the many twists and turns of Julian Assange’s legal woes were finally decided on Saipan – a little-known Pacific island.

  • by Lisa Visentin
Pandas can’t paper over Australia’s differences with China

Pandas can’t paper over Australia’s differences with China

Premier Li Qiang’s visit was the culmination of hard work by the government to recalibrate the relationship with China. But it also exposed differences that cannot be papered over with diplomatic niceties.

  • by Lisa Visentin
China renames hundreds of villages in Xinjiang to scrub away Uyghur identity: Human Rights Watch

China renames hundreds of villages in Xinjiang to scrub away Uyghur identity: Human Rights Watch

Villages once known by religious, historical or cultural terms of the Muslim minority group now carry names like “Red flag” or “Unity”.

  • by Lisa Visentin
This man fought on the front lines in Ukraine. Now he is preparing Taiwanese civilians for war with China

This man fought on the front lines in Ukraine. Now he is preparing Taiwanese civilians for war with China

As China ramps up hostilities in the Taiwan Strait, citizens in the island democracy are joining self-defence groups, fearing one day soon they will become civilian resistance to a communist invasion.

  • by Lisa Visentin and Daniel Ceng
Australian judges vow to stay despite mass resignations from Hong Kong’s top court
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CCP influence

Australian judges vow to stay despite mass resignations from Hong Kong’s top court

Former High Court chief justice Robert French has defended the role of Australians serving on Hong Kong’s top court.

  • by Lisa Visentin