Japan’s foreign affairs minister is seeking to free 17 Japanese nationals detained in China under the law.
Japan’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Iwaya Takeshi said on March 22 that Beijing’s Counter-Espionage Law lacks transparency and called for the release of Japanese individuals detained under the law.
“Having said that,” the statement continues, “the Japanese side called for the establishment of a fair, predictable and transparent business environment.”
Japan’s Efforts to Release Their Citizens
A Japanese government recap of an April 2, 2023, foreign ministers’ meeting between China and Japan in Beijing noted that Japan’s foreign minister at the time, Yoshimasa Hayashi, also broached the topic of China’s arrest of the unnamed Japanese businessman, protesting his detention and asking for his release.
US Citizens Detained in China
The U.S. National Security Council confirmed to The Epoch Times after the release of Mark Swidan, Kai Li, and John Leung in November 2024 that “all of the wrongfully detained Americans in the PRC are home.”
Swidan was incarcerated in China on drug-related charges and handed a death sentence in 2019, while Li, accused of espionage, faced a secret trial and was sentenced to a decade behind bars.
Leung, on the other hand, had been known for disseminating pro-China rhetoric in the United States and was revered in China—until he was arrested by the communist state for espionage and handed a life sentence in May 2023.
Earlier, in September 2024, the U.S. State Department had also secured the release of Pastor David Lin.
Beijing freed Lin, who was arrested in 2006 and sentenced to life in prison in 2009 while on a missionary trip to China and helping a group of house Christians.
The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) requires Christian groups to register and worship in state-controlled churches. Christians who do not follow CCP doctrines are subjected to religious persecution. They are also known as house Christians because they gather instead in private homes.
The United States has also criticized China’s counter-espionage law.
It went on to say that “any documents, data, materials, or items could be considered relevant to PRC national security due to ambiguities in the law.”
Catherine Yang contributed to this report.