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China hits US officials with sanctions, avoids top Trump aides

Bloomberg
Bloomberg • 3 min read
China hits US officials with sanctions, avoids top Trump aides
China said it will sanction 11 Americans in retaliation for similar measures imposed by the US, but does not target any members of the Trump administration.
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China said it will sanction 11 Americans in retaliation for similar measures imposed by the US on Friday, but the list doesn’t include any members of the Trump administration.

Those sanctioned include Senators Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz, Tom Cotton and Pat Toomey; Congressman Chris Smith; Human Rights Watch Executive Director Kenneth Roth; National Endowment for Democracy President Carl Gershman; and Michael Abramowitz, the president of Freedom House, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told a briefing in Beijing on Monday.

“In response to the US’s wrong behaviours, China has decided to impose sanctions on those individuals who behaved badly on Hong Kong-related issues,” Zhao said. He did not specify what the sanctions would entail.

China last month announced separate sanctions against US officials including Rubio and Cruz, in what was seen as a mostly symbolic attempt to retaliate over America’s steps to punish Beijing for its treatment of ethnic minorities in Xinjiang. Roth was refused entry to Hong Kong in January, after months of pro-democracy protests rocked the city.

Asked about China’s latest sanctions on Monday, President Donald Trump said “we’ve already responded in many ways.”

“We’re talking a lot about China, we shouldn’t have been talking about China -- we did a phase one deal and it was a wonderful deal and all of the sudden it means very little in the overall import of things,” he said at a briefing. “They should’ve never allowed what happened to the world, including us.”

Beijing in December had pledged sanctions on some rights organizations hit on Monday including HRW, Freedom House and the National Endowment for Democracy, after the President signed a law supporting Hong Kong’s protesters.

The US said Friday that it was placing sanctions on 11 Chinese officials and their allies in Hong Kong, including Chief Executive Carrie Lam, over their roles in curtailing political freedoms in the former British colony.

The others included Xia Baolong, director of the Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office of China’s State Council, and Chris Tang, commissioner of the Hong Kong Police Force, which has come under global criticism for tactics used against pro-democracy protesters.

White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany declined to say whether the Trump administration is planning to respond to China’s sanctions. Lam was sanctioned because she is “directly responsible for implementing Beijing’s policies of suppression of freedom and democratic processes,” the U.S. Treasury Department said in announcing the sanctions.

“Instead of taking meaningful actions such as immediately repealing the national security law, and stopping the systematic repression of Uighurs, the Chinese Communist Party opted to respond with this symbolic and ineffectual action,” McEnany said.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin -- who has helped lead months of protracted trade talks with China -- said the U.S. “stands with the people of Hong Kong and we will use our tools and authorities to target those undermining their autonomy.”

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