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Commentary
The Wall Street Journal

Beijing Makes a List and Checks It Twice

For Christmas, China imposed sanctions on me. Oh well, it’s the thought that counts.

miles_yu
miles_yu
Senior Fellow and Director, China Center
BANGKOK, THAILAND - NOVEMBER 18: China Foreign Minister Wang Yi enters the APEC Economic Leaders Retreat on Balanced, Inclusive and Sustainable Growth in the Queen Sirikit National Convention Center on November 18, 2022 in Bangkok, Thailand. Thailand is hosting the APEC meetings this year, which will culminate in the leaders' meetings which will run from Nov. 17 to 19. (Photo by Lauren DeCicca/Getty Images)
Caption
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on November 18, 2022, in Bangkok, Thailand. (Lauren DeCicca/Getty Images)

The Chinese Communist Party gave me a strange Christmas present. On Dec. 23 Foreign Minister Wang Yi signed an order imposing sanctions on me and Todd Stein, a Tibet expert who serves on the US Congressional-Executive Commission on China.

The sanctions amount to nothing. The regime froze my assets in China but I don’t have any. It banned any Chinese entities, institutions or individuals from making “transactions” with me (I have no intention of entering into any such transactions). And it prohibited my immediate family and me from obtaining visas to travel to China. I was born in China, but I regard it as unsafe to visit and haven’t since 2015.

So what was the point? Publicity. After Mr. Wang’s order, state propaganda outlets celebrated the news. The English-language Global Times did so in threatening terms: “Since ancient times, all those who have betrayed the country and the nation have met a tragic end. Yu’s can’t be any better.”

Read the full article in the Wall Street Journal.