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U.S. Orders China's Houston Consulate To Close

The Chinese consulate is shown Friday April 30, 2010 in Houston. Three Houston police officers have been restricted to desk duty after they followed a Chinese diplomat into the parking garage of the Chinese Consulate, arrested the man and injured him, the Houston mayor said. Mayor Annise Parker said in a statement that the officers' duties will remain limited pending an investigation into how Chinese diplomat Yu Boren was injured last Saturday. (AP Photo/Steve Campbell)
The Chinese consulate in Houston, shown in April. The U.S. has ordered China to close the consulate by Friday.

One day after the Justice Department indicted two Chinese hackers on charges of trying to steal research into a coronavirus vaccine, the U.S. has ordered China to close its consulate in Houston.

In a statement early Wednesday, State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus said: "We have directed the closure of [People's Republic of China] Consulate General Houston, in order to protect American intellectual property and American's (sic) private information."

China's foreign ministry said it had been given notice on Wednesday to restrict all events at its consulate in Houston and to move out all its employees by July 24. It called the move an "unprecedented escalation."

Hours earlier, local Houston media began reporting that employees at the Chinese consulate in the city were burning documents in the consulate courtyard.

Beijing alleged the U.S. confiscated and opened Chinese diplomatic mail pouches in October and June. The Vienna Convention, an international treaty to which the U.S. and China are parties which governs diplomatic operations, prohibits diplomatic personnel and pouches from being searched.

"If we compare the two [countries], it is only too evident which is engaged in interference, infiltration and confrontation," Wang Wenbin, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson, said at a regular press briefing on Wednesday.

Announcing the order to close China's Houston consulate, Ortagus also invoked the Vienna Convention.

"The Vienna Convention," she said, "states diplomats must 'respect the laws and regulations of the receiving State' and 'have a duty not to interfere in the internal affairs of that State.'

"The United States will not tolerate the PRC's violations of our sovereignty and intimidation of our people, just as we have not tolerated the PRC's unfair trade practices, theft of American jobs, and other egregious behavior," Ortagus said in the statement.

China immediately raised the prospect of retaliation. The foreign ministry spokesman called on the U.S. to reverse its decision on the consulate, but said, "Should [the U.S.] insist on going down this wrong path, China will react with firm countermeasures."

Chinese state tabloid the Global Times, which often serves as a conduit for statements of official policy, suggested on Twitter that Beijing could retaliate by shutting down the U.S. consulate in Hong Kong.

The U.S. also operates consulates in Shenyang, Chengdu, Shanghai, Wuhan and Guangzhou. China operates consulates in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Chicago, in addition to Houston.

Earlier this month, the U.S. indefinitely delayed the return of many of its diplomats to China because of disagreements over China's COVID-19 testing and quarantine requirements, also citing the Vienna Convention.

The two countries have repeatedly sparred over each country's handling of the coronavirus pandemic, Hong Kong's diminishing autonomy and China's deteriorating human rights.

Earlier this month, the U.S. sanctioned several elite Chinese Communist Party members for their involvement in orchestrating the detention and imprisonment of hundreds of thousands of ethnic Uighurs, a Turkic ethnic minority. The U.S. has also imposed sanctions on Chinese officials responsible for Beijing's growing control over Hong Kong. China responded by banning several American lawmakers from traveling to China.
Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.