US and China agree to relax restrictions on journalist visas following Biden-Xi meeting

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The deal addresses one source of contention in strained bilateral ties following a lengthy virtual meeting between Presidents Joe Biden and Xi Jinping on Monday.

Under the agreement, the two governments will increase the validity of journalist visas to one year from the current three months. The authorities will also make such visas eligible for multiple entries, allowing reporters to travel internationally.

The People’s Republic of China has committed to allowing American journalists who are already in the country to “freely depart and return, which they had previously been unable to do,” a US State Department official said Tuesday. “We plan to facilitate similar treatment.”

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian said China would lift its visa restrictions once the United States had done so.

“We hope the US will honor its commitment and implement relevant measures and policies as soon as possible,” Zhao told a press conference in Beijing. “This hard-won outcome is in the interests of the media on both sides and should be cherished.”

The two sides have also pledged to resume issuing new journalist visas, a process largely halted after the Chinese government expelled numerous American journalists in early 2020. Beijing insisted it was forced to retaliate after the administration of former President Trump designated US branches of China’s state media outlets as “foreign missions,” and capped the number of Chinese journalists working for those outlets in the United States.

American news organizations affected by the Chinese expulsions included the New York Times, the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal.

“We have remained in close consultation with the affected outlets facing personnel shortages, and we are gratified their correspondents will be able to return to the PRC to continue their important work,” said the US State Department official. It is unclear whether the expelled journalists will be able return, or if a new group of reporters will be allowed into China.

“We welcome this progress but see it simply as initial steps,” the US official added. “We will continue to work toward expanding access and improving conditions for US and other foreign media, and we will continue to advocate for media freedom as a reflection of our democratic values.”

A. G. Sulzberger, the publisher of The New York Times, said in a statement Wednesday that the company welcomes “any moves by the Chinese and U.S. governments to allow journalists to do the important work of informing the public.”

“We believe both countries will benefit from freer access to news and information about the other,” he said. “And we hope these initial steps will be followed by further action to ensure independent news organizations are able to provide free and robust coverage from inside China.”

Almar Latour, publisher of The Wall Street Journal and CEO of Dow Jones & Co, said that they are “encouraged by the reported direction of these negotiations and continue to believe that independent, accurate reporting from within China serves our readers and serves China itself.”

The Washington Post did not respond to a request for comment.

China’s state media first reported the journalist visa agreement. It came as a surprise, as a senior Biden administration official told reporters after the leaders’ meeting that this issue did not come up during their conversation.

A US Embassy spokesperson in Beijing on Wednesday characterized the agreement as a result of US officials pressing their Chinese counterparts on media access and visa issues “via working-level channels in recent months.”

— CNN’s Beijing bureau contributed to this report.



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