Haze Fan, a member of Bloomberg’s bureau in Beijing, was last seen being escorted from her building in Beijing by “plain clothes security officials” in December 2020 and was held on suspicion of endangering national security, Bloomberg said at the time.
A statement from the Chinese Embassy in Washington, dated May 6, was brought to the attention of Bloomberg over the weekend, a report from the news agency said on Tuesday. Bloomberg has not been able to contact Fan, it said.
Fan was formally arrested by China’s state security authority last July “on suspicion of committing crimes endangering national security,” according to the embassy.
The embassy included information about her case as part of a rebuttal letter it said it sent to The Washington Post in response to an advert in the paper marking World Press Day, which included information about Fan. The letter was subsequently posted on the embassy’s website.
Fan joined Bloomberg in 2017 and previously worked for CNBC, Al Jazeera, CBS and Reuters in Beijing, according to Bloomberg.
Chinese nationals are only permitted to work for foreign news outlets in “auxiliary” roles and must be hired through a Foreign Ministry-affiliated agency.
Bloomberg did not immediately comment further. The news agency has previously sought information on Fan’s whereabouts from the Chinese government and the Chinese Embassy in Washington.
Cheng was accused of illegally supplying state secrets overseas. Her case came before the courts in March where a verdict was deferred.
Observers have frequently raised concerns over secretive court processes and extrajudicial detentions in China.
In its statement, the Chinese Embassy said Fan’s case had “nothing to do with her status as a foreign media employee” and “even less to do with the so-called ‘Press Freedom.'”