Sunday, March 31, 2024

China issues travel advisory to citizens visiting the US, warning of ‘unwarranted interrogations and harassment’

Beijing urges citizens to prepare for ‘unexpected situations’ after Chinese students and workers are questioned and deported from American airports

Chinese foreign ministry says it has lodged formal protest with Washington over the situation


The US and China have pledged to encourage educational exchanges in recent months. 
Photo: Reuters

Phoebe Zhang
30 Mar 2024

China issued a travel advisory for citizens visiting the United States, asking them to take safety precautions and to be prepared for “various unexpected situations”, such as being searched.
Several Chinese students and company employees have recently been subjected to “unwarranted interrogations and harassment” by US airport law enforcement officers, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said on its WeChat account on Friday.

Their phones, computers and other luggage items were searched piece by piece, and several people were banned from entering the country, it said.

“The ministry and the Chinese embassy and consulates in the US have lodged a solemn representation to the US, and we remind those who plan to travel to the US to be aware of these situations,” it said, advising Chinese nationals in need of help to contact their embassy or consulate.

Since November, at least eight Chinese students with valid documents have been searched, interrogated or sent back just from Washington Dulles International Airport alone, according to a tally by Chinese media.

In January, China Science Daily, a newspaper affiliated with the Chinese Academy of Sciences, reported that a biological sciences PhD candidate was deported by officials at Dulles airport in December as she was trying to return to the US to continue her studies.

The report said the student was subjected to a body search and spent eight hours in an interrogation room followed by 12 hours in solitary confinement.

When she returned to China, she learned of 10 other Chinese students who had similar experiences. The students were mainly interrogated on their undergraduate scholarships from the China Scholarship Council and their involvement in confidential research, the newspaper said.

On March 8, Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning said the US has disrupted personnel exchanges between the two countries, violating the consensus reached by the heads of states. She called the incidents “political and discriminatory law enforcement” and said they were caused by the “cold war mentality” of some people in the US.

Last month, ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said US authorities were “weaponising” academic research, overextending the concept of national security, persecuting Chinese students, and “poisoning” the atmosphere of bilateral people-to-people exchanges.

In recent months, the two countries have pledged to encourage educational and other exchanges. In November, while on a visit to the US, Chinese President Xi Jinping announced China would invite 50,000 young Americans to study in the next five years.

This week, Xi met representatives from the US business community, academia and policy circles. He noted that the “China-US relationship is one of the most important bilateral relationships in the world” and expressed hope that people from all sectors in both countries could take part in more visits and exchanges.

Following that meeting, Chinese Minister of Education Huai Jinpeng met Stephen Schwarzman, chairman of investment management company Blackstone Group, and his delegation in Beijing on Thursday. Huai stressed that the ministry would encourage top universities in both China and the US to increase student exchanges and increase high-level cooperation.

Economic Diplomacy with Chinese Characteristics

The leaders of the PRC have often emphasized the concept of creating a “harmonious society” at the domestic as well as international level.


BYUMME LAILA
MARCH 30, 2024



People’s Republic of China, a rising global economic power has a unique way of developing policies in its style calling it “Chinese-Style” or “China’s wisdom”. The relationship of a state’s economy with its diplomatic ties is known as “Economic diplomacy”. States employ economic policies to achieve their foreign policy objectives. It is an umbrella term including trade agreements at the global and regional level, economic pacts, bilateral and multi-lateral investment projects, etc. At the broader level, economic diplomacy is divided into two major groups: developmental aid (Investment) and Economic sanctions. For example, the US along with other signatory states has imposed economic sanctions on many countries including Iran, Syria, Russia, and Cuba (Masters 2019). Similarly, states provide financial and developmental aid to developing countries to strengthen their diplomatic ties.

The leaders of the PRC have often emphasized the concept of creating a “harmonious society” at the domestic as well as international level. Similarly other ideas like “rejuvenation of the Chinese nation”, and “China’s dream of global development” are often used by Beijing’s top leadership (Embassy of the People’s Republic of China in the Lao People’s Democratic Republic 2011). Beijing has employed the instrument of Economic diplomacy to create a “harmonious society” focused on mutual benefits, peaceful coexistence and cooperation. Beijing has a unique approach to defining things according to their norms and values. PRC first redesigned its domestic economy through various reforms after the death of revolutionary leader Mao Zedong in 1976. President Deng Xiaoping introduced reforms for a sustainable economy. His successors also remain stuck to this goal and Beijing’s economy has gone through a major transition from an Import Substitute Industry (ISI) to Export Oriented Industry (EOI).

In 2013, President Xi Jinping launched a well-conceived mega-investment project called One Belt One Road, later known as the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). BRI is the revival of ancient China’s Silk Route. It has two dimensions: the Belt means an Economic Corridor on land while the Road denotes to a Maritime Silk Road. It is an infrastructure development project aimed at forming a web of connectivity through railways, roads, telecommunications, ports and energy pipelines, facilitating a network for three densely populated continents of the globe; Asia, Europe and Africa. Latin America has also become a part of BRI in recent years. According to the recent reports of 2023, 154 countries of the globe are part of BRI. There are five key components of BRI: strengthening regional political cooperation, free and unhindered trade, financial integration, infrastructure development and people-to-people exchange. The initiative defines China’s commitment to its principles of openness and cooperation, harmony and inclusiveness, market operations, and above all a ‘win-win situation’ for all countries of the globe towards a “common good” for mankind (Issued by the National Development and Reform Commission 2015). The six international Economic corridors include The New Eurasia Land Bridge Economic Corridor, The China-Mongolia-Russia Economic Corridor, the China-Central Asia-West Asia Economic Corridor, the China-Indochina Peninsula Economic Corridor, the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor and Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar Economic Corridor. The Maritime Silk Road covers the South China Sea, the South Pacific Ocean and the Indian Ocean connecting Southeast Asia, Oceania and North Africa (Hong Kong Trade Development Council ‘The Belt and Road Initiative 2018).

To provide financial assistance to this mega project, Beijing laid the foundation of two important global financial institutions: the New Development Bank (NDB) and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB).

NDB, headquartered in Shanghai is founded by Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa (BRICS) in 2014 with the purpose of financing and mobilizing resources for sustainable development projects in emerging markets of developing nations. NDB has identified key areas of interest such as clean energy, transport infrastructure, digital infrastructure, management of water resources (sanitation and irrigation), sustainable urban development, and economic cooperation among member states. Being the largest donor of NDB, China has contributed about $100 Billion (Yin 2014) . NDB is strictly committed to Beijing’s goal of prosperity and south-south cooperation. While addressing the Third Belt and Road Forum for International Cooperation held on October 18, 2023, the President of NDB Mrs. Dilma Rousseff praised Chinese values and commitment to global peace and harmony by quoting the famous proverb: “The Ocean is vast because it accepts all rivers”.

China, along with 57(37 Regional and 20 non-regional) other countries, launched AIIB in 2016, with headquarters in Beijing. Its mission is to enhance “social and economic outcomes in Asia”. That would be achieved by investing in sustainable infrastructure projects, connecting people, services, and markets, which ultimately impact the lives of billions; building a better future for them. According to recent reports, AIIB has 109 member countries which means 81% of the total global population and 65% of world’s gross domestic product (GDP). In 2020, the Board approved a Corporate Strategy reviving its pledge to development. The five pillars of Corporate strategy include: establishing a market position, achieving impact at higher scale, adding value along the project cycle, serving a broad range of clients and building the corporate culture. These pillars reflect Beijing’s core vision of economic sustainability and comprehensive banking accompanied by robust multilateral governance.

PRC’s persistence to its goal of creating a harmonious society is reflected through its economic diplomacy. Through its policies, it has created a favorable environment where countries can interact both at bi-lateral and multi-lateral levels for cooperation in different domains including economy, technology, industry, infrastructure development, etc. Beijing is an active member of many multilateral formal and informal groups like SC0, G20, G77 plus China, BRICS, and FOCAC (Forum on China-Africa Cooperation) which shows the success of its diplomacy. These multilateral groups are aimed at fostering economic and diplomatic engagements among member states. China’s role as a mediator in the Saudi-Iran Rapprochement is another example of Beijing’s concern for promoting regional stability and prosperity. PRC is the biggest trading partner of both Iran and Saudi Arabia. Beijing is importing 40% of its oil from the Middle East. Middle East is receiving huge trade and investment opportunities under BRI while China also showed its willingness to share expertise in fields like telecommunications, AI and other high-tech areas. In the first 10 years (2013-2023) of BRI, the PRC has invested a huge amount of $1 Trillion in different projects of this initiative. It clearly defines how Beijing is making huge investments in more than 154 countries following its commitment to prosperity and development in every part of the globe. During official visits for top-level summits, Chinese leaders are always accompanied by a large entourage of government officials and the business community. The purpose of this activity is to facilitate interaction with the business class of the host countries on the sidelines of summits and meetings to avail the options of partnerships and investments, immediately.

In my opinion, Beijing has effectively employed the instrument of economic diplomacy by launching the One Belt, One Road initiative (BRI). This initiative has not only opened ways to new and untapped markets of the developing world but also helped Beijing in fostering its diplomatic relations with these countries. PRC is member of many multi-lateral formal and informal groups but the chief areas of all the partnerships are economic cooperation and diplomatic relations. Beijing has strong diplomatic ties with its immediate neighbouring countries as well as with countries of Asia, Africa, Latin America and Europe.


Umme Laila Mphil Scholar at NDU, Isb. My area of interest includes strategic shifts in global order, complex economic interdependence and South Asian politics.

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