U.S. and China to ease restrictions on journalists as Biden and Xi seek to cool tensions

By Lily Kuo,

Str AFP/Getty Images

People watch screens showing live images of China’s President Xi Jinping speaking during the opening ceremony of the China International Import Expo (CIIE), at the media center of the CIIE in Shanghai on Nov. 4, 2021.

China and the United States reached an agreement to loosen restrictions on journalists operating in each other’s countries, marking one of the first diplomatic breakthroughs between the Biden administration and Beijing as leaders from both countries met on Monday to keep tensions from spiraling into conflict.

Hours after President Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping met in a virtual summit, the official China Daily reported late Tuesday that the two governments had agreed before the meeting to lift visa limits on journalists, reversing policies that had severely curtailed travel and access for media professionals in both countries for more than a year.

A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in Beijing confirmed the report, adding that U.S. officials had been pressing for months on media access and visas for journalists working for U.S. media outlets in China.

[In hours-long virtual meeting, Biden and Xi manage strained U.S.-China ties]

In March 2020, Beijing expelled more than a dozen
American journalists working for the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times and The Washington Post, a move China said was in retaliation for restrictions on Chinese nationals working for media outlets in the United States.

Since then, U.S. outlets operating in China have not been granted new visas for journalists. Their correspondents already based in the country were given short-term visas and were unable to leave the country without the risk of losing their accreditation.

Under the new agreement, U.S. journalists in China and Chinese journalists in the United States will be able to travel in and out of their country of assignment. It was not clear whether the expelled journalists would be allowed to return but the U.S. Embassy said the affected outlets would be granted new visas.

According to the embassy, the United States will begin issuing multiple-entry one-year visas to Chinese media professionals, up from 90-day visas that were given as part of tit-for-tat measures imposed by the Trump administration in an effort to pressure Beijing and Chinese state media operating in the United States. According to the China Daily report and the State Department, both sides will begin processing new journalist visas for applicants that meet eligibility requirements.

“We welcome this progress but see it simply as initial steps,” the spokesman said, speaking on the condition of anonymity according to official policy. “We will continue to work toward expanding access and improving conditions for U.S. and other foreign media, and we will continue to advocate for media freedom as a reflection of our democratic values.”

Chinese authorities have for years sought to restrict the work of foreign media outlets operating in the country, from surveilling and detaining reporters to withholding visas as a way to punish those whose work was seen as too critical of the government.

[Western journalists are getting squeezed out of China by superpower tensions]

The Trump administration, in an effort to push back, slashed the number of visas given to Chinese nationals working for Chinese state media in the United States. In response to the expulsion of American journalists in March, those visas were limited to 90 days.

Under Biden — who on Monday told Xi that “guardrails” are needed to ensure competition between the two countries does not turn into conflict — U.S. diplomats have begun to walk back some of those policies, engaging with China on trade and climate change. Reaching an agreement on journalist visas was seen as an easier task that could improve chances for other breakthroughs.

The State Department declined to say how many visas would be granted to U.S. journalists. Reporters in China said they continue to face restrictions on their work. Last year, Chinese authorities detained Australian citizen Cheng Lei, who worked for Chinese state media and later detained Chinese national Haze Fan, working for Bloomberg News.

Last week, the family of Chinese citizen journalist Zhang Zhan — detained after filming the struggles of residents under lockdown in Wuhan at the beginning of the pandemic — said she would likely die soon as a result of a sustained hunger strike.

The agreement to allow more U.S. journalists into China comes two months before Beijing hosts the 2022 Winter Olympics. Earlier this month, the Foreign Correspondents Club of China said in a statement based on accounts from media outlets that reporters were being denied access to Olympic events, blocked from venues, as well as berated for coverage that mentioned calls for boycotting the Games over China’s human rights record.

In response, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin described the statement as “not based on facts,” adding that China’s preparation for the Winter Olympics “follows the principle of openness.”

“We have always welcomed media outlets from across the world for reporting and coverage,” he said.

U.S. news publishers band together to urge China not to expel their journalists

Expelling U.S. journalists during coronavirus crisis, China doubles down on media war

China lauds Biden-Xi summit as start of more equal relationship, despite lack of real progress

Source: WP