Bangkok Post

Tensions rise over closure of consulate

Beijing slams move as ‘unjustifie­d’

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BEIJING: US-Chinese relations, already tense over the coronaviru­s pandemic and Beijing’s crackdown in Hong Kong, deteriorat­ed once again Wednesday as Washington ordered the closure of the Chinese consulate in Houston within 72 hours.

China slammed the US move, which came one day after the unveiling of a US indictment targeting two Chinese nationals for allegedly hacking hundreds of companies worldwide and seeking to steal virus vaccine research.

President Donald Trump threatened more consulate closures, telling reporters “it’s always possible”.

“We’re setting our clear expectatio­ns for how the Chinese Communist Party is going to behave,” US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said during a visit to Denmark.

“President Trump has said ‘enough,’” Mr Pompeo added.

He cited the indictment of the two Chinese nationals for computer hacking but did not specifical­ly mention the order to close the Houston consulate.

The closure of the Chinese diplomatic installati­on in one of America’s biggest cities marks a dramatic escalation in tensions between the world’s top two economies.

Washington and Beijing are feuding over a slew of issues ranging from trade to the pandemic to China’s policies in Hong Kong, Xinjiang and the South China Sea.

Republican Senator Marco Rubio, acting chairman of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, called the Houston consulate the “central node of the Communist Party’s vast network of spies & influence operations in the United States.”

The State Department said China has engaged in massive spying and influence operations throughout the US for years.

“These activities have increased markedly in scale and scope over the past few years,” it said.

In Beijing, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said the order to close the consulate was an “outrageous and unjustifie­d move which will sabotage ChinaUS relations.”

“China urges the US to immediatel­y withdraw its wrong decision, or China will definitely take a proper and necessary response,” Mr Wang said.

The ministry spokesman claimed the US “opened without permission Chinese diplomatic pouches multiple times, and confiscate­d Chinese items for official use.”

He also said its embassy in Washington had received “bomb and death threats on Chinese diplomatic missions and personnel in the US.”

Before the closure order was announced, firefighte­rs and police were called late Tuesday to the consulate building over reports that documents were being burned in trash cans in the courtyard, according to local media.

The Houston police force said smoke was observed, but officers “were not granted access to enter the building.”

“Everybody said ‘there’s a fire, there’s a fire,’ and I guess they were burning documents or burning papers? And I wonder what that’s all about,” Mr Trump asked later.

The Houston office covers eight southern US states — including Texas and Florida. There are five Chinese consulates in the US, as well as the embassy in Washington.

Chinese state-run tabloid the Global Times launched a poll on Twitter asking people to vote for which US consulate in China should be closed in response, including the ones in Hong Kong, Guangzhou and Chengdu.

The US has an embassy in Beijing plus five consulates in mainland China and one in Hong Kong.

Mr Trump’s administra­tion has ramped up pressure on China on a wide range of issues, imposing sanctions over policies in Tibet and Xinjiang, where an estimated one million Uighurs and other ethnic minorities are believed to have been rounded up and held in re-education camps.

The US has also downgraded relations with Hong Kong after China implemente­d a new security law which Washington says is in violation of Beijing’s promises of autonomy for the territory.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A man on a hoverboard walks his dog past the Chinese consulate in Houston, Texas.
REUTERS A man on a hoverboard walks his dog past the Chinese consulate in Houston, Texas.

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