China-US Row: Fugitive Researcher 'Hiding in San Francisco Consulate'

Prosecutors
allege that the case is part of a Chinese programme to send undercover army
scientists to the US.
On
Wednesday the Trump administration ordered the closure of China's mission in
Houston, saying it was involved in stealing intellectual property.
China
condemned moves against its scientists and consulates in the US.
Foreign
ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin accused the administration of using excuses to
limit, harass or crack down on Chinese scholars in the country.
"In
response to the US's unreasonable actions, China must make a necessary response
and safeguard its legitimate rights," he said at a press conference,
describing the US allegations as "malicious slander".
Following the row
over the Houston consulate, President Donald Trump threatened to close down
more Chinese missions.
In
recent months he has clashed repeatedly with Beijing over trade, the
coronavirus pandemic and China's imposition of a controversial new security law
on Hong Kong.
Court
filings by prosecutors in a federal court in San Francisco say the defendant,
named as Juan Tang, was a biology researcher at the University of California,
Davis.
According
to the filings, during an interview with FBI agents last month she said she had
not served in the Chinese military.
However,
the document says, an open-source investigation uncovered photos of her wearing
military uniform and a search of her home found further evidence of her
affiliation with China's People's Liberation Army (PLA).
"At
some point following the search and interview of Tang on June 20, 2020, Tang
went to the Chinese consulate in San Francisco, where the FBI assesses she has
remained," the filing, first reported on by the Axios news site, reads.
It adds: "As
the Tang case demonstrates, the Chinese consulate in San Francisco provides a
potential safe harbor for a PLA official intent on avoiding prosecution in the
United States."
Prosecutors
say that this is not an isolated case but "appears to be part of a program
conducted by the PLA" to send military scientists to the US on false
pretences.
The
document also highlights the cases of two other researchers arrested in
California in recent weeks for lying about their alleged ties to the military.
The Houston
consulate came under scrutiny on Tuesday when people overlooking the building's
courtyard noticed several bins on fire.
Footage
showed people throwing what appeared to be paper into the bins.
Emergency
services were called to the building but Houston police say they were not
granted access.
On
Wednesday, the administration gave China 72 hours to close the consulate
"to protect American intellectual property and Americans' private
information".
Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo said: "We are setting out clear expectations for how the
Chinese Communist Party is going to behave. And when they don't, we're going to
take actions that protect the American people, protect... our national
security, and also protect our economy and jobs."
The
consulate is one of five in the US, not counting the embassy in Washington.
China described the closure as a "political provocation".
There are a number
of flashpoints between Beijing and Washington. Some of the most serious are:
§
Coronavirus:
President Trump has repeatedly referred to Covid-19 as the "China
virus". and alleged it originated from a Chinese laboratory, despite his
own intelligence officers saying it "was not manmade". In response,
Chinese officials have suggested, without evidence, that Covid-19 might have
originated in the US
§
Trade: Mr Trump
has long accused China of unfair trading practices and intellectual property
theft. The US and China have engaged in a tit-for-tat tariff war since 2018 as
a result of the dispute
§
Hong Kong: China's
imposition of a sweeping new national security law in Hong Kong in June led the
US to revoke the region's preferential economic treatment. Beijing has accused
the US of "gross interference" in its domestic affairs, promising it
will retaliate
§
South China Sea: The two
countries have also clashed over Beijing's pursuit of offshore resources in
disputed waters, with Mr Pompeo calling it a "campaign of bullying".
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-us-canada
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