Global Times

China urgently summons US diplomats over interferen­ce

- By Li Ruohan

China on Thursday urgently summoned senior officials from the US consulate general in Hong Kong and lodged stern representa­tions over the contact between US consulate officials and Hong Kong secessioni­st forces.

Joshua Wong, who frequently collude with overseas anti-China forces to smear the image of China and the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region, admitted his interactio­ns with officials from the US consulate general on Tuesday, Hong Kong-based newspaper Ta Kung Pao reported.

The newspaper said Wong met with Julie Eadeh, political unit chief of the consulate general on Tuesday and discussed issues such as banning US exports of equipment to Hong Kong police.

Officials from Commission­er’s Office of China’s Foreign Ministry in Hong Kong have demanded the US consulate general clarify the contact while expressing strong discontent and resolute opposition to the interferen­ce by the diplomat.

In a statement released on Thursday, the commission­er’s office also urged officials from the US consulate general to draw a clear line with Hong Kong secessioni­st forces, stop sending wrong signals to the radical protesters indulged in violence and immediatel­y stop interferin­g in Hong Kong affairs.

“Do not go too far on the wrong path,” it warned.

The contact between the anti-China force and a US diplomat is “solid evidence” the US is behind the riots in Hong Kong, Li Haidong, a professor with the China Foreign Affairs University’s Institute of Internatio­nal Relations in Beijing, told the Global Times.

Eadeh was involved in plotting subversive actions under the name of human rights and democracy while she was stationed in the Middle East as a diplomat, said Ta Kung Pao.

She has worked for the US Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, which previously released the so-called human rights reports on China and the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region.

The meeting at such a critical moment shows that the US is using the chaotic situation to launch a color revolution in Hong Kong so that it could benefit from the disorder and better serve its strategy to contain China, Li noted.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China