China Orders Closure of US Consulate in Chengdu
China on Friday, 24 July, 2020 ordered the closure of the
US consulate in the southwestern city of Chengdu in retaliation for America
shuttering Beijing's diplomatic mission in Houston this week.
The move was a "legitimate and necessary response to
the unreasonable measures by the United States", the foreign ministry said
in a statement.
"The current situation in China-US relations is not
what China desires to see, and the US is responsible for all this," the
statement added.
Tensions have soared on multiple fronts between the
world's two biggest economies, deteriorating further after Washington ordered
the closure of the Houston consulate on Tuesday within 72 hours.
The United States cited Chinese theft of intellectual
property for the closure, which came a day after the Justice Department
unveiled the indictment of two Chinese nationals for allegedly hacking hundreds
of companies and attempting to steal coronavirus vaccine research.
China had threatened to retaliate against the consulate
closure if the US did not withdraw its decision.
In its statement on Friday, China's urged the US again to
backtrack and "create the necessary conditions for bilateral relations to
return to normal".
The US has an embassy in Beijing as well as five
consulates in mainland China and one in Hong Kong.
The Chengdu consulate was established in 1985 and has
around 200 staff
with approximately 150 locally hired Chinese employees, according to its
website.
It has been the site of diplomatic drama in past years.
In 2013, China demanded the US provide an explanation for
a spying programme after news reports said a
top-secret map leaked by fugitive intelligence analyst Edward Snowden showed US
surveillance facilities at embassies and consulates worldwide -- with the
Chengdu consulate among them.
The Chengdu mission was also where senior Chinese official Wang Lijun fled in 2012 from his powerful boss Bo Xilai
who was then head of the nearby metropolis Chongqing.
In recent days, Washington and Beijing have been crossing
swords over a slew of issues ranging from trade to the coronavrius
pandemic and China's policies on Hong Kong, Xinjiang and the South China Sea.
Republican Senator Marco Rubio earlier called China's
Houston consulate the "central node of the Communist Party's vast network
of spies and influence
operations in the United States".
Michael McCaul, Republican
Leader on the House Foreign Affairs
Committee, said the consulate was the "epicentre"
of Chinese efforts
to steal "sensitive information to build up their military".
The comments drew fire from Beijing, with foreign
ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin labelling Washington's
allegations "malicious slander".