Global Times

Cinemas ‘ not forced’ to screen film

- By Bai Yunyi

Chinese authoritie­s said Thursday that four of the six Japanese citizens detained in March for “illegal activities” have been released.

Two others are still being held for accusation­s of stealing China’s classifi ed informatio­n and breaking the country’s security law and counteresp­ionage law, offi cials said.

Hua Chunying, spokespers­on for China’s foreign ministry, said at a press conference on May 22 that China had investigat­ed six Japanese citizens under suspicion of illegal activities and had notifi ed the Japanese consulate in China in accordance with the China- Japan Consular Agreement.

The six Japanese were either employed by NC Geophysica­l Survey Co. or He Yuan Hot Spring Developmen­t Consultant Co.

The two still under investigat­ion are the heads of the two companies.

Offi cials said the six had conducted illegal surveying activities in Penglai, East China’s Shandong Province and Wuzhi Mountain in Sanya, South China’s Hainan Province in March, without any offi cial registrati­on, qualifi cation or permit. They were found with radioactiv­e gamma measuring devices in violation of China’s Surveying and Mapping Law and Mineral Resources Law, offi cials said.

Investigat­ions show that the two companies had conducted illegal surveys in China more than 30 times in the past 10 years.

One of the company’s head had illegally surveyed Mount Huangshan in March 2016. The suspect told authoritie­s he was “searching for hot springs.”

Investigat­ors discovered classifi ed materials on the suspects’ laptops, USB drives and other devices, including more than 80 maps. Two of the suspects are accused of stealing and holding China’s classifi ed informatio­n, the offi cials said.

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