China closes US consulate in Chengdu, takes over building

The American flag over the building was lowered at dawn, according to Chinese state-run broadcaster CCTV, and onlookers were moved back as a heavy police presence surrounded the consulate, which Beijing ordered to shut on Friday in a tit-for-tat move. Last week, the US government ordered the closure of China's consulate in Houston, Texas, claiming the mission had been involved in a larger Chinese espionage effort using diplomatic facilities around the US.


PTI | Beijing | Updated: 27-07-2020 20:18 IST | Created: 27-07-2020 20:07 IST
China closes US consulate in Chengdu, takes over building
Representative image Image Credit: Flickr
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China on Monday said it took control of the US consulate in Chengdu after it was formally closed as per Beijing's directive in retaliation to America's move to shut down the Chinese diplomatic mission in Houston. "At 10am July 27, as required by the Chinese side, the US Consulate General in Chengdu was closed," the Foreign Ministry said in a press release.

Chengdu is the capital of southwest China's Sichuan province. Later in his media briefing, Foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said, "this morning, US personnel evacuated the Consulate in accordance with Chinese requirements, and the US consulate in Chengdu was closed”.

He said the Chinese competent authority then entered from the main entrance and took over the premises. He defended the closure of US Consulate as a legitimate response to US ordering the closure of Chinese Consulate in Houston.

"The current situation between China and the United States is something we do not want to see, and the responsibility rests solely with the US,” he said, adding that China once again urge the US to immediately correct its mistakes and create necessary conditions for the relationship between the two countries to return to the track of normal development. Asked whether Chinese personnel entry into US Consulate in Chengdu was due to American officials entering Houston mission, Wang said the US has seriously violated international law and basic norms of international relations and initiated political provocations first.

"China has the right to take countermeasures reciprocally and safeguard its legitimate rights and interests," he said. The American flag over the building was lowered at dawn, according to Chinese state-run broadcaster CCTV, and onlookers were moved back as a heavy police presence surrounded the consulate, which Beijing ordered to shut on Friday in a tit-for-tat move.

Last week, the US government ordered the closure of China's consulate in Houston, Texas, claiming the mission had been involved in a larger Chinese espionage effort using diplomatic facilities around the US. The US State Department in a statement on Monday expressed disappointment over the closure, saying the consulate "has stood at the centre of our relations with the people in Western China, including Tibet, for 35 years." "We are disappointed by the Chinese Communist Party's decision and will strive to continue our outreach to the people in this important region through our other posts in China," the statement said.

Strict traffic controls were put in place around the US consulate premises before the closure. Shortly before 11 am, several cars, a white ambulance, and dozens of Chinese workers were seen leaving the Chengdu Consulate as dozens of people lingered nearby, the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post reported.

Several side streets, as well as a main road leading to the consulate were blocked, with dozens of policemen guarding the intersections. Cranes hoisted containers inside the main entrance of the US Consulate, while crowds gathered to witness the "historic" moment, taking photos and recording videos, state-run Global Times reported.

Since Saturday, people and vehicles were frequently seen going in and out of the consulate and locals have quietly gathered behind the police cordon in front of the main gate of the Consulate. Ellen Hu, a 30-year-old Chengdu resident among the crowd, said her office opened at 9.30am, but she had decided to wait until 10am to see the closure of the consulate. "It only happens once in decades," she told the Post.

Late on Sunday night, three semi-trucks and a crane truck entered the compound, guided by a handful of workers standing near the gate. The consulate, which opened in 1985, has almost 200 staff, including about 150 locally hired employees.

The two countries closed down their consulates as the ties between the world's two largest economies reached an all-time low. Tensions have been rising between the US and China for some time. President Donald Trump's administration has clashed repeatedly with Beijing over trade and the coronavirus pandemic, as well as China's imposition of a controversial new security law on Hong Kong. Washington has been critical of Beijing's crackdown on its Uygur Muslims in the restive Xinjiang province.

There was a festive atmosphere outside the consulate building in Chengdu almost as soon as the closure was announced on Friday. People gathered to take selfies, photos and videos. The tit-for-tat consulate closures have led to a sharp deterioration in relations between the two countries, but experts said their relationship could worsen further.

Shi Yinhong, a professor of international relations at Renmin University, told the Post that “the US has made up its mind to deal with China in all aspects. So in the following six months, until the new President moves into the White House (after the US elections), the possibility of further law enforcement against China, including on infiltration and intelligence activities, cannot be underestimated.” Shen Dingli, a professor at the Institute of International Studies at Fudan University, said China-US ties would keep deteriorating and the US presidential election would accelerate the downward spiral. “The two countries are having a deep decoupling and it's even possible for them to break diplomatic relations,” he said.

“It was impossible before because of globalisation but now the two countries are dramatically distancing from each other,” Shen said.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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