Two Americans detained in China for violating border rules

Beijing: Two Americans from an English-teaching business in China have been detained and bailed in the east of the country on suspicion of ‘organising others to illegally cross the border’, the country’s foreign ministry said Thursday.

Alyssa Petersen and Jacob Harlan, a father of five, were taken into custody in Jiangsu province, September 27 and 29 and then released on bail, said foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang.

Their Idaho-based company ‘China Horizons’, which arranges for Americans to teach English in Chinese schools, said in a post on its Facebook page Saturday that the charges were ‘bogus’.

The detentions come amid diplomatic and trade tensions between China and the United States.

“I do not see this incident as having any specific links to current China-US relations,” Geng Shuang said at a regular press conference here Thursday. “The US consulate in Shanghai was notified in a ‘timely fashion’ and consular visits were arranged for both of them,” he added.

The US State Department said it was ‘aware’ of the detention of two US citizens in Jiangsu and the charges being brought against them. “We take seriously our responsibility to assist US citizens abroad and are monitoring the situation,” a US embassy spokesman told this agency.

China Horizons said on Facebook that ‘their families are working on getting them international lawyers to help them get back home to the United States’.

Jacob Harlan, the founder of ‘China Horizons’, was being held in a hotel under police surveillance in the city of Zhenjiang, according to a separate ‘gofundme.com’ page set up for his legal fees.

Police detained Harlan while he was with his eight-year-old daughter at a hotel in Weifang, Shandong province, September 28 and took away his phone and computer, according to the post. His daughter was finally allowed to briefly call her mother, and she later took an international flight with a family friend.

Petersen, who is the assistant director of China Horizons, was detained around September 27 and was not heard from for two weeks until the State Department located her, according to her ‘gofundme.com page’.

AFP

 

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