Chinese journalists were asked to leave over adverse Home Ministry report: Sources

July 24, 2016 07:58 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 05:06 am IST - NEW DELHI

India decided not to renew the visas of three journalists of official Chinese news agency Xinhua after an adverse report from the Ministry of Home Affairs, sources confirmed to The Hindu . According to the report, that was forwarded from the State intelligence chief in Karnataka in April 2016, the journalists had travelled to Bengaluru where two of them had been intercepted by the police when meeting with members of the Tibetan community in Bylakuppe. At the time, sources said, the journalists were using different names from their identification papers.

Government sources have insisted that the journalists were not being “expelled” from India. “We had given them several fortnightly extensions on the understanding that their successors would be sent shortly,” a highly placed source said, adding that their visas had expired “four months ago”, and they were finally asked to collect their passports and leave the country by July 31, 2016. The government has also informed Xinhua that they are “welcome to send replacements”.

The three Xinhua journalists — Wu Qiang and Lu Tang, heads of Xinhua bureaus in Delhi and Mumbai respectively and She Yonggang, a reporter in the Mumbai bureau — were not available for comment on the allegations. Mr. Wu told The Hindu on Saturday that “no explanation has been given for the denial of visa renewal”.

However an associate of one of the journalists said that while they had travelled to Bengaluru, they were not aware that there was any issue with either “the areas they visited” or the “people they met”. The associate, who didn’t wish to be identified, also said that many Chinese nationals working outside the country adopt local names that are less difficult to pronounce.

Lu Tang, for example, who studied at both Jawaharlal Nehru University and the Sardar Patel University in Gujarat, where she researched for many year, had used the name “Laxmi” during her time in India. “Whether it is in Western countries or other Asian countries, that is standard for Chinese expatriates everywhere,” the associate said. The journalists had also sent a representation to External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj last week, requesting her to revise the government’s decision. However, with time running out, the journalists are understood to be making their travel plans to return to Beijing.

The event is expected to further strain ties between India and China, which have seen considerable tension in the last few months. In April, India had expressed its unhappiness over China’s decision to place a technical hold on its bid to have Jaish-e-Mohammad chief Masood Azhar banned by the U.N. Taliban 1267 committee. In the same month, Beijing had reacted adversely to a conference being held in Dharamsala for Chinese dissidents that subsequently saw India withdraw a visa to Uighur activist Dolkun Isa. The relationship saw its biggest strain more recently over the Nuclear Suppliers Group meeting where India accused China of blocking its membership bid. Last week, China’s decision to “express concern” over the violence in Jammu and Kashmir was another source of tensions.

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