26 January 2025
The following text is an original article in the magazine Bitter Winter written by Massimo Introvigne
https://bitterwinter.org/sabah-malaysia-a-textbook-example-of-how-chinese-influence-operates
A new report by Sinopsis shows the importance of China’s “soft power”campaigns to coopt the elites of other countries.
Prague. Dated January 11, 2025, its latest valuable report is on “CCP Subnational Influence in Malaysia: Co-opting Sabah’s Chinese Elite.”
Sabah is a state of Malaysia located in north-eastern Borneo. Ethnic Chinese amount to 7.3% of the population. Sabah’s Chinese elites, including business leaders, political advisors, and academics, have significant influence in politics, state institutions, and media. The report explains how coopting them and taking advantage of their credibility allows the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to shape key policy debates and media narratives in Sabah and Malaysia.
Sabah, the report notes, is strategically important to the CCP due to its natural resources like palm oil and timber, and its location near the South China Sea. Additionally, Sabah’s influence in national elections allows its politicians and elites to shape political outcomes.
The CCP targets ethnic Chinese elites in Sabah to influence resources and strategic discussions on port development, the Belt and Road Initiative, Uyghur treatment in Xinjiang, and China’s presence in the South China Sea.
The report discusses the role of Goh Tian Chuan, the President of the Federation of Chinese Associations Sabah (FCAS, 沙巴中华大会堂) and notes his “recent appointments to high-level United Front organizations [which] signals his relevance to the CCP.”
CCP influence operations in Sabah, the report concludes, have been largely successful. The CCP has managed to sway politicians during political changes in Sabah and Malaysia. By partnering with key Sabah figures, the CCP keeps pro-Beijing narratives active in local politics and media, portraying China as economically beneficial and its military presence as harmless while downplaying potential risks of Chinese dominance and criticism of the human rights situation of the Uyghurs and others.
If unchecked, the report says, CCP influence over Sabah’s port development and technology decisions could impact the broader Bornean and Southeast Asian region.
The report’s analysis is important beyond the specific case of Sabah. The common practices of decontextualized CCP influence operations—granting titles to individuals, establishing organizations, maintaining personal contact, and organizing events—, the report notes, are often underestimated in terms of their effectiveness. Compared to other methods of power projection, such as formal diplomacy, state-linked investment, propaganda, and military connections, Beijing’s influence operations are cost-effective, low-risk, and efficient. Sabah is a case in point. But it is not the only case.