Gulf Today

China jails US citizen for life on spying charges

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BEIJING: China has sentenced a 78-year-old US citizen to life in prison for espionage, a court said on Monday, but revealed few details about the previously unreported case.

Such heavy terms are relatively rare for foreign citizens in China, and the jailing of American passport holder John Shing-wan Leung is likely to further strain already-damaged ties between Beijing and Washington.

Leung, who is also a Hong Kong permanent resident, “was found guilty of espionage, sentenced to life imprisonme­nt, deprived of political rights for life,” said a statement from the Intermedia­te People’s Court in the eastern Chinese city of Suzhou.

Suzhou authoritie­s “took compulsory measures according to the law” against Leung in April 2021, it said, without specifying when he had been taken into custody.

It was unclear where Leung had been living at the time of his arrest.

A spokespers­on for the US embassy in Beijing said they were aware of reports that a US citizen had been recently convicted and sentenced in Suzhou.

“The Department of State has no greater priority than the safety and security of US citizens overseas,” the spokespers­on said.

“Due to privacy considerat­ions, we have no further comment.”

The court statement provided no further details on the charges, and closed-door trials are routine in China for sensitive cases.

Foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin declined to comment further on the case at a regular press briefing on Monday.

In Hong Kong, security minister Chris Tang told a news conference on Monday the city’s authoritie­s were notified of Leung’s arrest in 2021.

“The Hong Kong police have carried out follow-up action according to the notificati­on,” Tang said, refusing to elaborate further.

The jailing is likely to further damage relations with Washington, which are already severely strained over issues such as trade, human rights and Taiwan.

Washington and Beijing have just ended an unofficial pause in high-level contacts over the United States’ shooting down in February of a suspected Chinese surveillan­ce balloon.

US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan and top Chinese diplomat Wang Yi held eight hours of talks in Vienna in an apparent breakthrou­gh last week, with both sides describing the meeting as “candid, substantiv­e and constructi­ve.”

On Friday, Washington issued a statement condemning the reported sentencing of a Chinese human rights activist for “inciting subversion of state power.”

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