This story is from August 4, 2020

China vows retaliation if any US action against journalists

China vowed on Tuesday to retaliate if the United States persisted with "hostile action" against Chinese journalists who may be forced to leave in coming days if their US visas are not extended. "The US has been escalating its actions against Chinese journalists," Wang told reporters. "The US should immediately correct its mistake and stop its actions."
China vows retaliation if any US action against journalists
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BEIJING/SHANGHAI: China vowed on Tuesday to retaliate if the United States persisted with "hostile action" against Chinese journalists who may be forced to leave in coming days if their US visas are not extended.
Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin told reporters at a daily briefing that no Chinese journalist in the United States had been granted a visa extension since the United States, on May 11, limited their stay to 90 days, with an option to extend.

"The US has been escalating its actions against Chinese journalists," Wang told reporters. "The US should immediately correct its mistake and stop its actions."
"If the US persists, China will take a necessary and legitimate response to safeguard its rights," he said.
Wang did not say how many Chinese journalists were affected or what retaliation China might consider, but the editor of China's Global Times newspaper said earlier US journalists based in Hong Kong would be among those targeted should Chinese journalists be forced to leave the United States.
"Chinese side has prepared for the worst scenario that all Chinese journalists have to leave," Hu said on Twitter.
"If that's the case, Chinese side will retaliate, including targeting US journalists based in HK."

The Global Times is published by the People's Daily, the official newspaper of China's ruling Communist Party.
The two countries, whose relations have deteriorated sharply recently over various issues including trade and the novel coronavirus, have exchanged several tit-for-tat actions involving journalists in recent months.
The United States in March slashed the number of Chinese nationals allowed to work at the US offices of major Chinese state-owned media to 100 from 160.
China expelled US journalists working for three US newspapers - New York Times, Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post - this year and has threatened to match any more US action against Chinese journalists.
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