Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
International

Globe And Mail Journalist Nathan VanderKlippe Detained For Three Hours By Chinese Officials

The Canadian Press, 24 Aug, 2017 11:39 AM
    The Globe and Mail says one of its journalists was detained while reporting in the Xinjiang region in western China.
     
    Nathan VanderKlippe, the Globe's correspondent in Asia, says in several Twitter posts Wednesday that he was held for about three hours before Chinese officials released him.
     
    The newspaper's editor-in-chief says VanderKlippe was detained, had his computer seized and was then released from custody, but was followed.
     
    A Globe report says VanderKlippe was in the Elishku township in Xinjiang attempting to do interviews Wednesday evening when a police officer pulled up next to him on a motorcycle before two more officers arrived, along with others who appeared to be government officials.
     
    VanderKlippe says in the report that he identified himself as a journalist and then was told to follow the men to a local government office.
     
    He says the men demanded to search his belongings and when he pushed back, they said the regular rules do not apply to them. He says he received a hand-written note by officials acknowledging that his property had been seized.
     
    VanderKlippe says he was then allowed to leave Elishku by car and says he was followed out of town.
     
    In a statement, editor-in-chief David Walmsley calls the harassment of VanderKlippe in China "deeply disturbing."
     
    "To arbitrarily detain a reporter, take his computer and then upon releasing him from custody continue to follow his car as if he were little more than a bandit, is a sad indictment," Walmsley says.
     
    He says Mark McKinnon, a former Asia correspondent for the newspaper, was also expelled from the same region in 2009.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Balwinder Singh Gets 15 Years In US Jail For Planning Terror Strikes In India For Khalistan Movement

    Balwinder Singh Gets 15 Years In US Jail For Planning Terror Strikes In India For Khalistan Movement
    US District Judge Larry Hicks in Reno also ordered Balwinder Singh to remain under lifetime federal supervision upon his release from prison after prosecutors argued that Singh has had ties to known terrorist groups in India for more than two decades.

    Balwinder Singh Gets 15 Years In US Jail For Planning Terror Strikes In India For Khalistan Movement

    New Zealand Doesn’t Condone Race-based Abuse, Says Envoy After Indian’s Assault

    New Zealand Doesn’t Condone Race-based Abuse, Says Envoy After Indian’s Assault
    New Zealand does not condone race-based abuse in any form, its acting High Commissioner Suzannah Jessep on Tuesday said, a day after an Indian national was allegedly assaulted and subjected to a racist tirade in that country.

    New Zealand Doesn’t Condone Race-based Abuse, Says Envoy After Indian’s Assault

    Sikhs In Washington Express Concern After Shooting; FBI Joins Probe, India Voices Concern

    Sikhs In Washington Express Concern After Shooting; FBI Joins Probe, India Voices Concern
    The US State Department has also, on behalf of the Donald Trump administration, expressed condolences and said they are working on the case.

    Sikhs In Washington Express Concern After Shooting; FBI Joins Probe, India Voices Concern

    Ahmedabad Journalist Chosen For Indian American-Funded Fellowship

    Ahmedabad Journalist Chosen For Indian American-Funded Fellowship
    Ahmedabad-based journalist Smitha Rajan has been chosen for a fellowship in the US funded by a foundation started by prominent Indian-American IT entrepreneur Frank Islam and his wife Debbie Driesman.

    Ahmedabad Journalist Chosen For Indian American-Funded Fellowship

    Indian-American Congressman Ami Bera Condemns Sikh's Shooting

    Indian-American Congressman Ami Bera Condemns Sikh's Shooting
    Indian-American Congressman Ami Bera has denounced the shooting of a Sikh man in Washington state, which is being investigated by the FBI and the police as a possible hate crime.

    Indian-American Congressman Ami Bera Condemns Sikh's Shooting

    Muslim Swimmers Allowed To Race Wearing 'Burkinis' In England

    Muslim Swimmers Allowed To Race Wearing 'Burkinis' In England
    Muslim women swimmers have won the right to race in loose-fitting full body outfits or 'burkinis' while taking part in amateur swimming competitions in England.

    Muslim Swimmers Allowed To Race Wearing 'Burkinis' In England