Beijing: Two Wall Street Journal reporters left China on Monday after being expelled over a controversial headline in an op-ed that angered Beijing.
Three reporters were ordered out of the country last week over what Beijing deemed a racist headline that the journalists were not involved in writing -- marking one of the harshest moves against foreign media in years.
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But analysts noted that the decision to revoke their credentials came a day after Washington tightened rules on Chinese state media operating in the US -- raising suspicion that Beijing had retaliated.
The Journal opinion piece -- headlined "China is the Real Sick Man of Asia" -- was written by a US professor who criticised Beijing's initial response to the coronavirus outbreak.
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China's foreign ministry said that it was "racially discriminatory", and as the newspaper wouldn't apologise, the three China-based reporters had their press cards revoked.
Deputy bureau chief Josh Chin and reporter Chao Deng, both US nationals, as well as reporter Philip Wen, an Australian, were given five days to leave the country, according to the Journal.
The three journalists work for The Wall Street Journal's news section, which is not linked to the editorial and opinion pages.