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Leaked list of 41 Aussie vineyards owned by Chinese firms

<p>Aussie wine lovers are being urged to steer clear of 41 Australian wineries after a viral list revealed that they were owned by Chinese companies.</p> <p>The list was shared on social media following Beijing's escalating feud with Australia, which has led to restrictions to be imposed on Australian industries.</p> <p>This includes the wine industry, which has been impacted with new import taxes of up to a shocking 212 per cent.</p> <p>Other industries impacted include timber, lamb, lobster and barley, with fears their tactics could spread to other sectors.</p> <p>The list was shared on the<span> </span><a rel="noopener" href="https://www.facebook.com/vinoeamigos" target="_blank">Vino e Amigos</a><span> </span>Facebook page and revealed that most of the Chinese-owned vineyards are in Victoria, South Australia, Tasmania, WA and NSW.</p> <p>The Facebook page has since been deleted.</p> <p>Some pointed out that the percentage of each winery owned by Chinese companies was not on the list and that wineries owned by Australian-Chinese people weren't to blame.</p> <p>Another pointed out some on the list were “run by Aussie workers though, and Aussie workers are still getting paid”, indicating a boycott may cause more harm than good.</p> <p>“No wonder some Aussies always say the govt is selling the country to China,” one person posted, while another added: “Aussie winemakers have been teaching the Chinese how to make wine for years. For what, to screw us over?”</p> <p>The unprecedented tariffs on Australian wine would destroy the sector which was already struggling due to bushfires.</p> <p>“The wine production industry generated revenue of $7 billion in 2019-20. Of that amount,$2.9 billion was generated from exports,” IBISWorld Senior Industry Analyst Matthew Reeves said.</p> <p>“China is the dominant market for Australian wines, accounting for 36.7% of export revenue last year.”</p> <p>“Australia’s premium wine exports will have an easier time finding new buyers outside of China, supporting bigger players in the industry. On the other hand, exports of cheaper wines will likely face significant difficulty in the coming months.”</p>

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"Vile anger": Cafe owner cops abuse over Dan Andrews coffee tariff

<p>A café owner from Melbourne’s South-east announced he would be removing his “tongue in cheek” sign that said Daniel Andrews’ supporters would be charged extra for coffees after he received a wave of abuse and threats.</p> <p>Acrobar co-owner Franz Madlener told <em>Today </em>that police visited the business on Wednesday night and “strongly suggested” he remove his sign as it was inciting anger.</p> <p>Mr Madlener added he felt forced to hire security guards after people threatened to throw rocks at the business because of the sign.</p> <p>The café owner had the sign on the counter for three weeks before it received criticism after going viral on social media on Wednesday.</p> <p><img style="width: 500px; height: 281.25px;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7838371/coffee-melbs-1.jpg" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/25c176b8226c47d2a143a19cc70cdc6a" /></p> <p>“Initially it was fine, we had about 30 people see the humour in it and put $1 into the tip jar,” the café owner told hosts Karl Stefanovic and Allison Langdon.</p> <p>“But in the last 24 hours, I guess since this sign’s gone viral, the level of abuse and vile anger and personal attacks on the business, me and the staff yesterday, was completely over the top.”</p> <p>Mr Madlener said they received a call that threatened to have their windows smashed with rocks and spray paint, just as it had been done to Premier’s office.</p> <p>He said the police’s grave warning encouraged him to remove the “light-hearted” sign.</p> <p>“If you’ve had the police ask you to take the sign away, of course,” Mr Madlener said.</p> <p><img style="width: 500px; height: 281.25px;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7838372/coffee-melbs-2.jpg" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/671ba6c54dcc47e994e04cc344720d98" /></p> <p>“My main concern is for our staff, to keep the staff safe. We don’t want people coming in and using that to create more anger against the staff.</p> <p>“Up until now we’ve been fighting lockdown and now we’re fighting these absolute extremists out there full of absolute hate towards the business.”</p> <p>The café owner says the sign was not meant to be political but instead was supposed to be a “light-hearted” protest to counter comments about how they should feel grateful and lucky about the government lifting strict COVID-19 restrictions.</p>

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