US confirms journalist jailed by China is American citizen

U.S. diplomats have not been granted permission by China to meet with James Wang, a jailed magazine publisher and naturalized American citizen, since his 2014 arrest in southern China, the Obama administration said Wednesday.
A court in Shenzhen this week sentenced Wang, also known as Wang Jianmin, to five years in prison on charges of running an illegal business, bribery and collusion after he sent copies of his sensitive political magazine to mainland China.
State Department spokesman John Kirby said the U.S. was not permitted to attend Wang’s trial and will continue to request visits.
Wang’s lawyer Chen Nansha said yesterday that Wang might not appeal the verdict. Wang also holds residency in Hong Kong — a semiautonomous Chinese territory — and last entered China with his Hong Kong identity card before his arrest, Chen said.
China does not recognize dual citizenship and likely tried Wang as a Chinese citizen, particularly as he entered the country with Chinese documents.
Wang, along with editor Guo Zhongxiao, who was also arrested in mainland China in 2014, published New Way Monthly and Faces, two journals that often delved into high-level Communist Party intrigue.
Their arrests and convictions, following the temporary disappearance of five Hong Kong booksellers, has raised questions about Hong Kong’s status as a free press haven and has cast a chill over the territory’s free-wheeling political book trade. AP

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