The Jerusalem Post

China plans to restrict visas for US visitors with ‘anti-China’ links

- • By KEITH ZHAI

SINGAPORE (Reuters) – China is planning tighter visa restrictio­ns for US nationals with ties to anti-China groups, people with knowledge of the proposed curbs said, following similar US restrictio­ns on Chinese nationals, as relations between the countries sour.

China’s Ministry of Public Security has for months been working on rules to limit the ability of anyone employed, or sponsored, by US intelligen­ce services and human rights groups to travel to China.

The proposed changes follow the introducti­on by the US of tighter rules for visas for Chinese scholars in May.

New US visa restrictio­ns announced on Tuesday, on Chinese government and Communist Party officials the United States believes responsibl­e for the detention or abuse of Muslim minorities, had bolstered the case for the new Chinese restrictio­ns, one of the sources said.

“This is not something we want to do, but we don’t seem to have any choice,” the source said.

The Chinese rules would mandate the drafting of a list of US military and CIAlinked institutio­ns and rights groups, and the addition of their employees to a visa blacklist, according to the sources, who declined to be identified.

The tighter restrictio­ns come amid heightened concern in Beijing that the US and other government­s are using such organizati­ons to incite anti-government protests in both mainland China and Hong Kong, and would also be in retaliatio­n for the US visa restrictio­ns against Chinese researcher­s and officials, the first source said.

“The plan has been widely discussed by senior police officers over recent months, but made more likely to be implemente­d after the Hong Kong protests and the US visa ban on Chinese officials,” the source said.

China’s National Immigratio­n Administra­tion, which operates under the Ministry of Public Security, did not immediatel­y respond to a faxed request for comment.

Rivalry between the US and China is fueled by a range of issues including commercial competitio­n, human rights and worries about security.

The US took a major step in confrontin­g China in May when it added Chinese tech giant Huawei Technologi­es Co and 70 affiliates to its so-called Entity List, banning the Chinese company from acquiring components and technology from US firms without US government approval.

The United States suspects Huawei’s equipment could be used by Beijing for spying, which the Chinese firm has repeatedly denied.

The US Commerce Department on Monday cited the mistreatme­nt of Uighur Muslims and others in a decision to add 20 Chinese public security bureaus and eight companies to a trade blacklist, including the world’s largest maker of video surveillan­ce gear, Hikvision, and the world’s most valuable artificial intelligen­ce start-up, SenseTime.

The US moves have cast a pall over US-China trade talks in Washington on Thursday and Friday between Chinese Vice Premier Liu He and US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.

The US is also moving ahead with discussion­s on possible restrictio­ns on capital flows to China, with a focus on investment­s by US government pension funds, Bloomberg reported.

The latest tit-for-tat visa restrictio­ns began in April when some prominent Chinese scholars had their US visas revoked. The following month, the US introduced legislatio­n intended to prohibit anyone employed or sponsored by the Chinese military from getting student or research visas.

 ?? (Yuri Gripas/Reuters) ?? THE TIGHTER RESTRICTIO­NS come amid heightened concern in Beijing that the US is using human rights organizati­ons to incite anti-government protests in both mainland China and Hong Kong.
(Yuri Gripas/Reuters) THE TIGHTER RESTRICTIO­NS come amid heightened concern in Beijing that the US is using human rights organizati­ons to incite anti-government protests in both mainland China and Hong Kong.

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