New Straits Times

US urged to end ‘harassment’ of Chinese students

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China’s public security minister called on the United States homeland security secretary to stop alleged “harassment” of Chinese students entering the US in a meeting between the two in Vienna, Beijing’s state media reported yesterday.

Beijing has repeatedly alleged that Chinese nationals with valid travel documents have been subject to aggressive interrogat­ions and deportatio­ns at US airports.

Last month, its embassy in Washington said Chinese travellers should avoid the capital’s Dulles airport.

In a readout of talks on Sunday between Wang Xiaohong and Alejandro Mayorkas, Beijing said Washington must “stop harassing and checking Chinese students for no apparent reason”, state news agency Xinhua said.

In his meeting with Mayorkas, Wang urged the US to “ensure that Chinese citizens enjoy fair entry treatment and full dignity”, according to Xinhua.

Wang also pressed Mayorkas to “rectify” the US decision to place China on a list of major countries transiting or producing narcotics. US officials have long charged that China is complicit in the trade of fentanyl, which is many times more powerful than heroin and is responsibl­e for more than 70,000 overdose deaths a year in the US.

Last month in Beijing, US and Chinese officials agreed to cooperate to curb the production of ingredient­s to make fentanyl, known as precursor chemicals.

A US readout of Sunday’s talks said Wang and Mayorkas had held “discussion on the steps needed to combat the spread of precursor chemicals”.

Washington and Beijing also discussed expanding cooperatio­n “in the fight to protect children from online child sexual exploitati­on and abuse”, the readout added.

Relations between China and the US have warmed over the past year as Washington has pursued dialogue with Beijing.

But the Chinese government still resents US measures, including a ban on exports of advanced semiconduc­tors and sanctions on Chinese firms and individual­s.

In talks in Munich last week, Foreign Minister Wang Yi told Secretary of State Antony Blinken the US must “lift illegal unilateral sanctions”.

Wang also called on the US to “stop unwarrante­d harassment and interrogat­ion of Chinese citizens.”

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