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Two independent Chinese journalists, identified by rights groups as veteran reporter Liu Hu and his associate Wu Yingjiao, were detained after publishing an investigative piece alleging corruption by a local official in Sichuan province.
Police in Chengdu said on Feb. 2 and in statements this week they were investigating a 50-year-old man surnamed Liu and a 34-year-old man surnamed Wu on suspicion of “making false accusations” and “illegal business operations,” and had placed them under “criminal coercive measures,” a term typically referring to detention.
The article, published on Jan. 29 on the WeChat platform and since deleted, examined alleged graft involving Pu Fayou, Communist Party secretary of Pujiang county.
Reporters Without Borders and other rights groups condemned the detentions, citing a restrictive environment for independent reporting in China; Liu was previously detained in 2013 after reporting on official misconduct.
The case has drawn international attention amid recent diplomatic engagement between Beijing and several democratic governments and underscores persistent risks faced by independent journalists operating outside official media channels in China.






















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