US warns Americans AGAINST traveling to China because of the risk if being wrongfully detained and arbitrary exit bans
- Advisory comes after a 78-year-old U.S. citizen was sentenced to life in prison on spying charges in May
- China recently passed a broadly written counterespionage law
- Advisory warns: U.S. citizens in China ‘may be detained without access to U.S. consular services or information about their alleged crime’
DAILY MAIL
The U.S. recommended Americans reconsider traveling to China because of arbitrary law enforcement and exit bans and the risk of wrongful detentions.
No specific cases were cited, but the advisory came after a 78-year-old U.S. citizen was sentenced to life in prison on spying charges in May.
It also followed the passage last week of a sweeping Foreign Relations Law that threatens countermeasures against those seen as harming China´s interests.
China also recently passed a broadly written counterespionage law that has sent a chill through the foreign business community, with offices being raided, as well as a law to sanction foreign critics.
‘The People´s Republic of China (PRC) government arbitrarily enforces local laws, including issuing exit bans on U.S. citizens and citizens of other countries, without fair and transparent process under the law,’ the U.S. advisory said.
‘U.S. citizens traveling or residing in the PRC may be detained without access to U.S. consular services or information about their alleged crime,’ it warned.
The advisory also said that Chinese authorities ‘appear to have broad discretion to deem a wide range of documents, data, statistics, or materials as state secrets and to detain and prosecute foreign nationals for alleged espionage.’
It listed a wide range of potential offenses from taking part in demonstrations to sending electronic messages critical of Chinese policies or even simply conducting research into areas deemed sensitive.
Exit bans could be used to compel individuals to participate in Chinese government investigations, pressure family members to return from abroad, resolve civil disputes in favor of Chinese citizens and ‘gain bargaining leverage over foreign governments,’ the advisory said.
Similar advisories were issued for the semi-autonomous Chinese regions of Hong Kong and Macao. They were dated Friday and emailed to journalists on Monday