Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S., China made diplomatic moves leading up to summit

- RAYMOND ZHONG AND KATIE ROGERS THE NEW YORK TIMES

Shortly before President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping met for a virtual summit this week, the United States sent seven Chinese nationals who had been convicted of crimes back to China, and Beijing lifted an exit ban on a U.S. citizen who had been blocked from leaving for four years.

One of the Chinese nationals who was repatriate­d was a woman who had been convicted in 2019 of trespassin­g after she had entered former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort with a cache of electronic­s, according to a senior administra­tion official. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive diplomatic affairs.

China’s Foreign Ministry declined to comment.

The moves came less than two months after the United States reached an agreement to allow Meng Wanzhou, a senior executive at the Chinese tech giant Huawei, to return home after a nearly three-year diplomatic standoff. China reciprocat­ed within hours, releasing two Canadians whom it had held since shortly after Meng was arrested in Canada.

Two American siblings who had been blocked from leaving China for more than three years were also allowed to return to the United States. Victor Liu, a student at Georgetown University, and Cynthia Liu, a consultant at McKinsey & Co. — had never been accused of wrongdoing in China. But their father, Liu Changming, a former executive at a Chinese bank, was wanted by the Chinese police for his role in a fraud case.

The exit ban on Liu Changming’s children was seen as a way to pressure him to return to China and turn himself in.

The series of diplomatic actions appeared intended to cool tensions between the two government­s, which have become increasing­ly confrontat­ional on trade, technology, human rights, the future of Taiwan and other issues. At their video summit, Biden and Xi reached no breakthrou­gh accords, agreeing only on the need to prevent frictions from escalating into all-out conflict.

The American who was allowed to leave China this month, Daniel Hsu, has not been convicted of any crimes in China. Hsu told The Associated Press last year that Chinese authoritie­s blocked him and his wife from returning to their home in Washington state in August 2017, in what Hsu said was an apparent attempt to convince his father to return to China and face embezzleme­nt charges. Hsu’s father, Xu Weiming, denies the charges, the AP reported.

The State Department has been warning Americans who are considerin­g travel to China of the risk of “arbitrary detention and exit bans.” In most cases, the department says, U.S. citizens become aware of an exit ban only when they try to leave China.

One of the Chinese nationals whom the United States sent back to China last week is Yujing Zhang, a businesswo­man who talked her way into Mar-aLago in 2019. After Zhang was questioned by the Secret Service, agents found that she was carrying four cellphones, a laptop and an external hard drive. They found an additional trove of gear in her room in a different hotel.

The incident exposed holes in Trump’s security apparatus.

But Zhang’s trial in Fort Lauderdale, in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida, did not attempt to address whether she had been engaging in espionage.

The Miami Herald reported this month that Zhang finished serving her eight-month sentence in late 2019 but was held in immigratio­n custody for much longer because of “deportatio­n delays” related to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

China’s Foreign Ministry this week also announced the repatriati­on from the United States of Xu Guojun, a former bank executive who had fled China two decades ago after being accused of corruption and embezzleme­nt. A federal jury in Las Vegas found Xu guilty of conspiracy charges in 2008.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry hailed Xu’s return as a “major achievemen­t” in the authoritie­s’ 20-year pursuit of justice in the case.

 ?? (AP/Susan Walsh) ?? President Joe Biden meets virtually with Chinese President Xi Jinping from the Roosevelt Room of the White House on Monday. Biden and Xi reached no breakthrou­gh accords, but agreed on the need to prevent frictions from escalating into all-out conflict.
(AP/Susan Walsh) President Joe Biden meets virtually with Chinese President Xi Jinping from the Roosevelt Room of the White House on Monday. Biden and Xi reached no breakthrou­gh accords, but agreed on the need to prevent frictions from escalating into all-out conflict.

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