Miami Herald

China restricts U.S. official travel to Hong Kong

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China is imposing restrictio­ns on travel to Hong Kong by some U.S. officials and others in retaliatio­n for similar measures imposed on Chinese individual­s by Washington, the Foreign Ministry said Thursday.

U.S. diplomatic passport holders visiting Hong Kong and nearby Macao will temporaril­y no longer receive visa-free entry privileges, spokespers­on Hua Chunying said.

U.S. administra­tion officials, congressio­nal staffers, employees of non-government­al organizati­ons and their immediate family members will face “reciprocal sanctions,” Hua said.

She was apparently referring to U.S. sanctions that bar certain Chinese and Hong Kong officials from traveling to the U.S. or having dealings with the U.S. financial system over their roles in imposing a sweeping National Security Law passed this summer that ushered in a crackdown on free speech and opposition political activity in Hong Kong.

Hua said the move was taken “given that the U.S. side is using the Hong Kong issue to seriously interfere in China’s internal affairs and undermine China’s core interests.”

Those sanctioned “have performed egregiousl­y and are primarily responsibl­e on the Hong Kong issue,” she said at a daily briefing.

“China once again urges the U.S. side to immediatel­y stop meddling in Hong

Kong affairs, stop interferin­g in China’s internal affairs, and not go further down the wrong and dangerous path,” Hua said.

China had long threatened to retaliate against the U.S. sanctions and other actions seen as hostile.

Earlier, China’s official Xinhua News Agency said Trump administra­tion officials are “digging a hole” for the next U.S. administra­tion’s relationsh­ip with China through actions targeting the country and its officials.

Steps such as restrictin­g visas for the 92 million members of the ruling Communist Party and their families have “again exposed the sinister intentions of extreme anti-China forces in Washington to hijack China-U.S. relations for their own political gain,” Xinhua said in an editorial.

The U.S. State Department last week cut the duration of such visas from 10 years to one month, another example of the increasing­ly hard-line stance adopted by the administra­tion in its waning days.

That came in addition to the sanctions targeting specific Chinese and Hong Kong officials over their actions in Hong Kong, the northweste­rn region of Xinjiang and elsewhere.

While President-elect Joe Biden has signaled he intends to keep pressure on China, he’s also expected to seek a return to more convention­al, less confrontat­ional style of diplomacy. Rolling back Trump-era measures could be difficult however, while giving Republican­s the chance to renew accusation­s that Biden is softening Washington’s stance toward Beijing.

“By relentless­ly challengin­g the bottom line of China-U.S. relations on issues concerning China’s core interests, anti-China politician­s are not only digging a hole for the next administra­tion’s relationsh­ip with China, but also eying their own personal political gains,” Xinhua said.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has castigated China on almost a daily basis over its policies toward Taiwan, Tibet, Hong Kong, Xinjiang and the South China Sea.

Dozens of officials from mainland China and Hong Kong have been hit with visa bans and other sanctions and new restrictio­ns have been imposed on Chinese diplomats, journalist­s and academics.

Chinese tech giant Huawei has been shut out of the U.S. market and the U.S. has lobbied other countries to follow suit, often successful­ly.

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