China frees US firm Mintz staff in move to soothe foreign sentiment
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The Chinese authorities detained five local staff in the raid in 2023.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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BEIJING - The Chinese authorities have released all employees of a US corporate due diligence firm detained in Beijing two years ago, in an apparent move to reassure foreign firms operating in China amid sliding foreign investment in the world’s No.2 economy.
The detained Beijing employees of Mintz Group, all Chinese nationals, have been freed, a company spokesperson told Reuters on March 25.
News of their release came on the heels of the just-concluded China Development Forum in Beijing attended by dozens of foreign chief executives, a platform that Chinese officials had used to bring home the message that China is open to foreign capital.
The Chinese authorities had detained five local staff in a raid
The employees of Mintz, which specialises in background checking, fact gathering and internal investigations, were detained in March 2023 just before the same high-profile economic forum, casting a chill on foreign sentiment towards China.
Reuters reported in May 2023, citing sources, that Mintz had engaged in corporate due diligence work examining the possible use of forced labour in supply chains linked to China’s Xinjiang region.
China has said it welcomes foreign trade and investment but stressed that national security precedes development.
“We are grateful to the Chinese authorities that our former colleagues can now be home with their families,” the Mintz spokesperson said in an e-mail.
Mintz has 12 offices around the world and more than 280 investigators, according to its website.
Ahead of 2025’s China Development Forum, Chinese officials had mounted a charm offensive, stepping up meetings with top foreign executives
Foreign direct investment in China plummeted 27.1 per cent in local currency terms in 2024 compared with a year earlier, according to official data – the most since the 2008 global financial crisis.
The outreach also came as tit-for-tat tariffs with the US escalated, showing Beijing’s eagerness to consolidate ties with global business leaders to fend off disruptions sparked by US President Donald Trump, who is expected to heap more penalties on Chinese goods as soon as in April. REUTERS

