Beijing: Chinese authorities have detained a Beijing-based Chinese news assistant for Bloomberg on what they said was suspicion of endangering national security, the American financial news service said.
Bloomberg reported on Friday that Haze Fan was seen being taken from her apartment building by plainclothes security officers at about noon Monday, shortly after her last contact with her editors.
The charge of endangering national security is a vaguely defined one that can lead to lengthy detention with little recourse to legal assistance.
China permits Chinese citizens to work only as translators, researchers and assistants for foreign news organizations, not as registered journalists able to report independently. China’s media are almost entirely state-owned and tightly controlled, and the country has long been one of the leading jailers of journalists.
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Bloomberg said it had been seeking information about Fan’s whereabouts from the Chinese government and China’s embassy in Washington, D.C. It said its parent company, Bloomberg LP, was informed Thursday that she was being held.