Sun. Nov 10th, 2024
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Chinese police have prevented a woman from returning to her home in the United States in an effort to compel her husband to return to China, she wrote in a letter he made public.

The case appears to be the latest example of Chinese authorities placing an “exit ban” on a person’s relatives to pressure them to return.

In an appeal to authorities, Fang Xie, 51, wrote that the police have told her that she is “innocent” but that she cannot leave until her husband, a former bookseller who left China after his store was shut down for political reasons, gives himself up.

She was barred from boarding a plane in Shanghai last August, her husband Miao Yu said, and hasn’t been able to leave China since.

Exit bans, which critics have likened to hostage-taking, have affected both Chinese citizens and foreigners. The US government includes exit bans as a risk in its travel advisory for people going to China.

A wide array of Chinese books can be seen on display at Shanghai bookstore
Mr Yu left China after his store was shut down for political reasons.(AP Photo: Miao Yu)

Mr Yu declined to provide contact information for his wife, citing concerns about her safety. He did, however, arrange for an Associated Press journalist to join a call between them in which she confirmed that she wrote the letter but declined to comment further.

Use of bans exceeds international norms

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