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China mum as Iceland envoy reportedly held for spying
by Staff Writers
Reykjavik (AFP) Sept 17, 2014


China refuses to clarify the status of its ambassador to Iceland, who left the country mysteriously in January, the Icelandic foreign ministry said Wednesday, after a news report that he has been arrested for spying for Japan.

The envoy, Ma Jisheng, has not been replaced, and Reykjavik has been informed only that he was unable to return for "personal reasons", foreign ministry spokeswoman Urdur Gunnarsdottir told AFP.

Icelandic media reports claimed that the ambassador and his wife had "disappeared".

Hong Kong's Ming Pao daily, citing US-based Chinese-language website Mingjing News, said Ma and his wife "were suspected of giving state secrets to Japan and were arrested (in early February) by the Ministry of State Security."

Ma was a high-ranking diplomat in Japan from 2004-08.

A Chinese foreign ministry official was unable to shed further light on Ma's whereabouts at a press briefing in Beijing on Wednesday, telling reporters: "I have no information on this."

The Chinese embassy in Iceland has refused all media requests for comment, and its website has a blank space where the name of the ambassador would normally appear.

Iceland's strategic location close to Arctic oil and gas reserves as well as new Arctic maritime routes has led to closer diplomatic ties with China.

It entered a free trade agreement with Beijing in April 2013, the only European country to do so.

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India's new prime minister will spend his 64th birthday Wednesday at a private dinner with Xi Jinping in his home state of Gujarat, as the Chinese president begins a visit that will set the tone for relations between Asia's rival superpowers. Despite his hardline nationalist reputation, Narendra Modi moved quickly to engage with traditional rival China after taking office in May, and has pul ... read more


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