San Diego Union-Tribune

U.S. PLACES VISA LIMITS ON MORE CHINESE CITIZENS

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The State Department said Friday that it would deny visas to Chinese citizens linked to overseas inf luence operations involving violence and other means of intimidati­on.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the restrictio­ns would apply to Chinese Communist Party officials or anyone else taking part in such propaganda or inf luence campaigns affiliated with the United Front Work Department.

The United Front has been involved in efforts to put pressure on people outside China’s borders who raise concerns about human rights abuses in the Uighur region, Tibet and elsewhere. Its “coercive tactics” have included publicly releasing personal details about critics and their family members online as a means of intimidati­on, Pompeo said in announcing the new restrictio­ns.

The measure is intended to show that “those responsibl­e for actions that contravene the rules-based internatio­nal order are not welcome in the United States,” he said.

The restrictio­ns are the latest punitive measure taken against China’s leadership and economy in response to sharpening disputes over human rights, the coronaviru­s pandemic, trade, technology, Taiwan and a host of other issues.

Chinese citizens would be denied a visa to enter the United States if they have taken part in United Front efforts using violence, threats or other means of pressure against overseas Chinese communitie­s, academics or civil society groups in the U.S. or elsewhere to advance the “CCP’s authoritar­ian narratives and policy preference­s,” the State Department said in a separate statement on the measure.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear how many people would potentiall­y be covered by the new restrictio­ns.

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