USA

US Envoy Visits 3 US Citizens Jailed in China, Official Says

FILE - U.S. Ambassador to China Nicholas Burns is pictured in Beijing, July 4, 2022. In recent weeks, Reuters reported on March 24, 2023, Burns met with at least three U.S. citizens who Washington says have been wrongfully detained in China.

Chinese American citizen Kai Li, jailed in China on spying charges that he denies, received a rare in-person visit last week from the U.S. ambassador to Beijing and urged the U.S. government to continue to work for his release, Li's son said Friday.

Over the past month, U.S. Ambassador Nicholas Burns met for the first time in more than five years with at least three U.S. citizens who Washington says have been wrongfully detained, a senior U.S. official and family members said.

Burns met Li on March 16 in a Shanghai prison, Li's son Harrison said. Li, a businessman, has been held in China since 2016 and was handed a 10-year jail sentence in 2018 for espionage.

"The biggest message that my dad wanted to convey is to remind everyone in the U.S. government and the public that ... he's 100 percent innocent," Harrison Li said. "Of course, the U.S. government knows this, but he said it just bears repeating."

Burns wanted to shake Li's hand, but Chinese authorities did not allow that, Harrison Li said. The two could see and hear each other in an hourlong meeting through a floor-to-ceiling glass partition, he said.

Harrison Li said that when the ambassador asked his father what he hoped to do once he was released, he replied that he wanted to work on "improving relations between the United States and China."

China did not allow in-person visits during its prolonged COVID-19 lockdown.

Burns also met with Mark Swidan, a Texas-based businessman who was convicted by a Chinese court in 2019, and David Lin, an American pastor detained in China since 2006, the senior U.S. official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity.

He did not provide the dates but said Burns visited the men "within the last few weeks" and that "this is the first time he's actually had a chance to get face to face."

Burns accompanied consular officers on the prison visits, a State Department spokesperson said.

China's embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Burns visited the three men at a time when relations between Washington and Beijing are the worst in decades following a series of disputes, including Washington's accusation that China flew a spy balloon over the continental United States in February. A U.S. fighter jet shot it down. China has said the balloon was a civilian research craft, but the dramatic episode forced U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken to postpone a trip to Beijing.

Since then, there has been little positive diplomacy between the two countries aside from a brief, tense meeting between Blinken and top Chinese diplomat Wang Yi on February 18 in Munich.

And last week Chinese President Xi Jinping visited Moscow where he and Russian President Vladimir Putin jointly denounced the United States.

The detainee issue often takes a back seat to more urgent issues in the U.S.-China relationship. Families of detained Americans say the freedom of their relatives should not be bundled up with challenging policy issues and are better addressed in a separate track focused on humanitarian matters.