Key Points
China revoked New York Times reporter's residency permit on June 01.
U.S. revoked Xinhua journalist's visa on May 29 in retaliation.
Beijing accused Times of calling Taiwan a separate nation.
Both countries dispute media access and press freedom principles.
China’s Foreign Ministry cancelled a New York Times reporter’s residency permit on June 1, accusing her of deceptive reporting practices and violating journalism regulations. The move follows the publication’s coverage of Taiwan as a separate state. The U.S. responded the same day by revoking a Xinhua News Agency journalist’s visa, marking an escalation in media disputes between Washington and Beijing.
Beijing Cites Reporting Violations
China’s Foreign Ministry revoked the residency permit of New York Times reporter Vivian Wang on June 1. Ministry spokesman Lin Jian said Wang violated the Foreign Resident Journalists and Foreign Journalists Interview Regulations during her time in China. Beijing also accused the Times of providing a platform for Taiwan independence rhetoric and referring to Taiwan as a separate nation, which China says violates the one-China principle and U.S.-China joint communiques.
U.S. Retaliates With Visa Revocation
The United States revoked a Xinhua News Agency journalist’s visa on May 29, citing reciprocal action against China’s expulsion of Wang in February. U.S. officials framed the move as a response to what they called political pressure on American media operations. China’s Foreign Ministry rejected this characterization, stating the U.S. initiated the media dispute unilaterally and politicized the issue.
Broader Media Access Dispute
Lin Jian told reporters that China has granted visa access to numerous American journalists in recent years, while Chinese journalists applying to work in the U.S. rarely receive approval. He called on the U.S. to implement shared agreements on media issues and protect Chinese journalists’ legal rights to work and live in America. Both countries have accused each other of restricting press freedom and creating barriers to news gathering.
Final Thoughts
China and the U.S. are locked in an escalating media dispute with no clear resolution. Both sides accuse each other of violating press freedom principles, making future cooperation on journalist access unlikely in the near term.
FAQs
China accused reporter Vivian Wang of violating journalism regulations through deceptive reporting and objected to the Times calling Taiwan a separate nation.
The U.S. revoked a Xinhua News Agency journalist’s visa on May 29 in reciprocal response to China’s February expulsion of the Times reporter.
China grants visas to many American journalists but says Chinese journalists rarely receive U.S. approval to work in America.
Disclaimer:
The content shared by Meyka AI PTY LTD is solely for research and informational purposes. Meyka is not a financial advisory service, and the information provided should not be considered investment or trading advice.
About Author

Danny Kontos
Co FounderDanny Kontos has been a stock investor since 2007 and co-founded Meyka in 2023. He keeps a small, focused portfolio and only moves when the numbers are hard to argue with. He has waited years on a single position before. Before Meyka, he ran a web hosting company and a mortgage lending platform, so he knows what a well-run business actually looks like under the hood. This article did not come from a news cycle. It came from someone who has been watching this space for a long time.
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