BEIJING (AP) — China has sanctioned two U.S. individuals in retaliation for motion taken by Washington over human rights abuses in Tibet, the federal government said Friday, amid a seamless standoff between the perimeters over Beijing’s treatment of spiritual and ethnic minorities.
The Foreign Ministry said in an announcement that Todd Stein and Miles Yu Maochun, together with their close members of the family, could be banned from entering China.
Any assets that they had in China could be frozen and they might be barred from contact with people or organizations inside China.
The notice said the measures were in response to the U.S. sanctioning two Chinese individuals “under the excuse of the ‘Tibet human rights’ issue.” Neither could immediately be reached for comment.
On Dec. 9, the U.S. imposed sanctions on Wu Yingjie, the highest official in Tibet from 2016 to 2021, and Zhang Hongbo, the region’s police chief since 2018.
Political Cartoons on World Leaders

Political Cartoons

“Our actions further aim to disrupt and deter the People’s Republic of China’s (PRC) arbitrary detention and physical abuse of members of spiritual minority groups within the Tibetan Autonomous Region,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in announcing the sanctions.
An accompanying Treasury Department notice said Wu had been liable for “stability policies” in Tibet whose implementation involved “serious human rights abuse, including extrajudicial killings, physical abuse, arbitrary arrests, and mass detentions.”
It said that in Zhang’s tenure, police have been engaged in serious human rights abuses, including “torture, physical abuse, and killings of prisoners, which included those arrested on religious and political grounds.”
The Chinese announcement gave no specific accusations against Stein and Yu.
Stein has been deputy staff director on the Congressional-Executive Commission on China since 2021 and previously served as senior advisor to Under Secretary of State for Civilian Security, Democracy and Human Rights Sarah Sewall, including serving as her lead staffer on Tibetan issues. Previously, he was director of presidency relations on the monitoring group International Campaign for Tibet.
The Chinese-born Yu is a senior academic who taught on the U.S. Naval Academy and a noted critic of the regime of Chinese Communist Party leader Xi Jinping. He served as key China adviser under former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
China lately has passed laws mandating tit-for-tat sanctions against foreign individuals from the U.S., the EU and other countries over perceived slights against its national interests. Washington and others have compiled an extended list of Chinese officials barred from visiting or engaging in transactions with their financial institutions starting from the leader of the semi-autonomous city of Hong Kong to local officials accused of human rights abuses.
China claims Tibet has been a part of its territory for hundreds of years, although backers of the exiled Buddhist leader the Dalai Lama say it was functionally independent for many of that point.
Communist forces invaded in 1950 and China has ruled the Himalayan region with an iron fist ever since, imposing ever stricter surveillance and travel restrictions for the reason that last rebellion against Beijing’s rule in 2008. Lengthy prison sentences in dire conditions are imposed for acts of defiance, including defending the region’s unique language and Buddhist culture from attempts at assimilation.
China has also been accused of detaining tons of of 1000’s of Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities in reeducation camps as a part of a campaign to wipe out their native language and culture, including through forced adoptions and sterilizations. China denies such charges, saying it has only been fighting terrorism, separatism and non secular extremism.
Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material might not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.