Chinese journalist detained for more than a year faces spying charges, family says
BEIJING — A veteran Chinese journalist who worked at a Communist Party-affiliated newspaper and was a fellow at Harvard University faces espionage charges after being detained while meeting with a Japanese diplomat in a restaurant, his family said.
Dong Yuyu, deputy head of the editorial department at Guangming Daily, regularly met with foreign journalists and diplomats to help understand global trends. But Chinese authorities regarded his contacts with foreign diplomats as evidence of spying, according to a family statement Monday.
Dong is the latest in a series of liberal Chinese voices to be accused by the government of being linked to what it terms foreign interference.
As a non-Communist Party member, he was one of the most pro-reform voices at Guangming Daily and wrote articles in favor of an independent legal system, his family said. He was awarded a Nieman fellowship at Harvard University in 2006-07 and became a visiting fellow at Keio University in Japan in 2010. Four years later, he served as a visiting professor at Hokkaido University in Japan.
But his writings caused him problems in China. In 2017, an investigation by party authorities found that some of his articles were “anti-socialist,†and Dong was threatened with demotion, his family said.
He was detained in February 2022 while eating lunch with a Japanese diplomat at a restaurant in a Beijing hotel where he often met with foreign friends, the statement said. The diplomat was also detained, triggering a strong protest from Japan’s Foreign Ministry. The diplomat was released after several hours, but Dong has remained in detention.
Xi Jinping’s Xinhua news agency used my work to help promote its distorted vision of life in the U.S. and China.
His family was told in March that Dong would be tried, but the date remains unclear, the statement said. In China, espionage can be penalized with a jail term of more than 10 years.
On Tuesday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said she did not know the specifics of Dong’s case when she was asked about it. The ministry did not immediately respond to a request for further comment.
Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi declined to comment when asked about the case, citing the sensitivity of the issue.
Dong’s case has drawn international attention, with the National Press Club in Washington issuing a statement Monday calling for his release.
News of a Sino-U.S. agreement to ease restrictions on foreign journalists comes after a virtual summit between President Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping.
More than 60 people, including prominent foreign journalists and academics, also signed a petition urging the Chinese government to reconsider the charges against Dong, saying meetings with foreign diplomats and journalists should not be regarded as evidence of espionage.
“Who would want to come to China to meet Chinese journalists, academics or diplomats if these meetings could be used as evidence that the Chinese side is committing espionage?†they wrote in the petition.
Separately, a group of writers and scholars issued a statement Saturday calling for the release of Taiwan-based publisher Li Yanhe, who was reportedly detained in Shanghai. They said his lawyer and family members have not been allowed to see him. Radio Free Asia reported last week that Li was detained during a trip to visit relatives in China.
On Wednesday, spokesperson Zhu Fenglian of China’s Taiwan Affairs Office said Li was under investigation on suspicion of engaging in activities that endanger national security. She said his rights would be protected in accordance with the law.
In 2022, Australian journalist Cheng Lei was tried in China on national security charges, but he has not yet learned of the verdict, Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said in March. Cheng was born in China and was a journalist for CGTN, the English-language channel of China Central Television. She was detained in August 2019 and accused by China of sharing state secrets.
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