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The latest victim of China's hostage diplomacy, in a very long line of victims, is Australian citizen Cheng Lei (pictured, photo from her Facebook page). She has been working for China's Party-state TV station CGTN for eight years and is a high-profile anchor of their Global Business show. Born in China, she grew up in Australia and is an Australian national. Her page and video clips on CGTN website have been scrubbed.
On 31 August, the Australian foreign minstry confirmed she had been detained, with Australia's ABC saying she is being held under Residential Surveillance at a Designated Location (RSDL), a custodial system that places the victim without access to any legal help at a secret facility for up to six months without charge. It was the same system used to initially detain the two Canadian Michaels (see below) and another Australian citizen, writer Yang Hengjun, in the past two years.
There's no information as to why she is being held, but Australia-China relations have soured in recent years with Australia calling for an international inquiry into the origins of the Coronavirus pandemic and most recently a decision by Canberra to enact legislation that would force local governments and institutions to get final approval for any deals with foreign governments from the foreign affairs minister. This is largely seen as cracking down on deals made with China, such as Belt and Road projects and Confucius Institutes.
Timeline of Ms Cheng's Disappearance
For more on RSDL, see Safeguard Defenders new report, Rampant Repression, that shows that around 20 people a day are disappeared into this feared custodial system.
A report out today by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute called The Chinese Communist Party's Coercive Diplomacy found 152 cases of coercive diplomacy affecting 27 countries in the past decade. As well as arbitrary detentions, this includes trade sanctions, tourism bans and restrictions on official travel and are aimed at punishing "undesired behaviour" over issues such as territorial claims, Huawei's 5G technology, criticisms of its human rights policies in areas like Xinjiang, and how it handled Covid-19.
The main targets of China’s hostage diplomacy in the past 12 months have been Canada for not freeing Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou from a US extradition request and Australia, first for failing to ratify an extradition treaty with China, and then for criticizing Beijing’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic and calling for an international inquiry into the origins of the disease.
Expect to see more UK victims in the near future too as the UK opens a citizenship path for some 3 million Hongkongers and passed further restrictions on Huawei and its role in its future 5G network.
These are some examples of China's hostage diplomacy since the beginning of this year.
By forcing overseas Chinese who have become naturalized citizens of other countries to renounce their new citizenship, China can more easily deny them consular access in detention, prison and prevent embassy staff attending their court trial.
In recent years, Citizens of at least seven countries or regions—the US, Taiwan, Japan, Turkey, Kazakhstan, Hong Kong and Belize, and including a consular official and a university professor—have been disappeared in China in what appears to be arbitrary detentions, many accused of national security crimes, others caught up in the vast network of concentration camps in Xinjiang. And these are just the high-profile ones that media report.
For more on China's hostage diplomacy see here.