China denies credentials to Wall Street Journal reporter - paper

China denies credentials to Wall Street Journal reporter - paper
By Reuters
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SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China has not renewed journalist's credentials for a reporter of the Wall Street Journal, the newspaper's parent company said on Friday, effectively kicking him out of the country.

Chun Han Wong, a Singapore national, had been based in Beijing, where he had reported on politics in China since 2014. His visa expired on Friday.

"We can confirm that Chinese authorities have declined to renew Chun Han's press credentials," a Dow Jones spokesman said in an email. "We continue to look into the matter."

A person with direct knowledge of the situation said officials at the foreign ministry, which accredits foreign reporters, had voiced displeasure to the Journal about a June 30 story written by Wong and another reporter, Philip Wen.

The report https://www.wsj.com/articles/chinese-presidents-cousin-draws-scrutiny-of-australian-authorities-11564500031 said Australian authorities were looking into the activities of one of Chinese President Xi Jinping's cousins as part of probes into organised crime, money laundering and alleged Chinese influence-peddling.

In response to questions about Wong's case, the foreign ministry said in a statement, "We resolutely oppose malicious, defamatory attacks on China by individual foreign reporters and we do not welcome this sort of journalist."

Singapore's embassy in Beijing did not reply to emailed questions about the case.

Foreigners are not allowed to work as journalists in China without official credentials, which are required to obtain a residence visa.

Wen, an Australian, was given a three-month visa on the day before his latest visa was due to expire, the source said. Most journalist visas in China are good for a year.

The source said the foreign ministry deemed Wong to be "unfriendly" towards China in his reporting.

Writing reports about Chinese leaders or their families can be sensitive in China, where the ruling Communist Party tries to keep an iron grip on information about the leadership and curates its image carefully.

Neither the New York Times nor Bloomberg News received new journalist visas for more than a year after they published stories in 2012 about the wealth of family members of former Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and Xi, respectively.

(Reporting by John Ruwitch and Ben Blanchard; Editing by Darren Schuettler and Clarence Fernandez)

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