•
2014: Operation Fox Hunt started under Xi Jinping's anti-corruption campaign. Chinese operators in the U.S. had stalked, threatened U.S. residents and their relatives, including pressuring immigrants to become spies. •
May 2016: A last-minute court ruling in
Seoul canceled a series of music and dance performances by
Shen Yun scheduled for the KBS hall. According to a Freedom House analyst, Shen Yun presents
traditional Chinese culture, such as stories from classics and scenes from imperial dynasties, alongside portrayals of religious persecution of Falun Gong in today's world. The court's ruling cited "threats by the Chinese embassy aimed at the theater owner, including implicit references to financial reprisals if the shows go on as planned." •
April 2023: In a press release, the U.S. Department of Justice announced that it had charged 40 officers from China's national police in cases involving transnational repression schemes targeting individuals in the United States. These officers, who are believed to reside in China and other parts of Asia, face charges related to illegal harassment using fake social media accounts and censoring
online meetings. •
April 2023: Lu Jianwang and Chen Jinping were charged in New York City for operating an
illegal police station on behalf of China's
Ministry of Public Security. •
April 2023: In a report published by the
University of Sheffield, the authors noted several case studies of Chinese transnational repression of Uyghurs: • Najmudin Ablet traveled to Turkey from Xinjiang in 2016. His family members were later detained and sentenced by Chinese authorities. He was contacted by the Chinese police in 2019, offering him a glimpse of his family and proposing cooperation in exchange for their release, involving spying on Uyghurs in Turkey. Skeptical of their credibility, Ablet refused the proposal. • Erbaqyt Otarbay, an ethnic Kazakh from Xinjiang, endured conditions akin to those faced by Uyghurs during his internment from July 27, 2017, to May 23, 2019. Upon release, he was coerced into signing a nondisclosure agreement about the camp's operations. Despite this, Otarbay shared his ordeal upon his return to Kazakhstan, where he faced harassment from both Xinjiang and Kazakhstan authorities through calls and visits. Seeking refuge from this intimidation, he ultimately escaped to the UK, where he testified about his experiences at the Uyghur Tribunal on September 12, 2021. On July 24 and 25, 2024, the two pleaded guilty to acting as unregistered agents of a foreign government and bribing a public official. Feng received a time-served sentence of 16 months in prison on September 26, 2024. On November 19, 2024, Chen was sentenced to 20 months. •
June 2023: Yong Zhu, a New York resident, was convicted of acting as an illegal foreign agent, stalking, and conspiracy to commit stalking to bully a former Chinese official in New Jersey into returning to China as part of the CCP's Operation Fox Hunt. In January 2025, Zhu was sentenced to two years in prison. •
November 2023: During the
APEC United States 2023 summit in San Francisco, pro-CCP supporters attacked Chinese, Hong Kong, and Tibetan dissident protesters. According to
The Washington Post, some of them have ties to various
united front groups. U.S. officials and human rights groups have described the events as an example of PRC transnational repression. •
December 2023:
Hong Kong Police issued a reward of 1 million Hong Kong dollars ($128,000) for information on five individuals involved in the 2019 Hong Kong protests against China's National Security Law, including a U.S. citizen. U.S. Secretary of State
Antony Blinken criticized this initiative, calling it an act of transnational repression and referring to it as a "bounty list," and expressed the United States' rejection of such attempts to intimidate and target those who advocate for freedom and democracy. •
July 2024: The U.S. Department of Justice charged Ping Li, a resident of Florida and an immigrant from China, with conspiring to act as an undisclosed Chinese agent. Li has resided in the U.S. for 30 years and was an employee of telecommunications and information technology companies at different times. According to the press release, since around 2012, Li served as a contact working under the direction of China's Ministry of State Security (MSS), which is in charge of civilian intelligence collection. Li has obtained and provided to the MSS information regarding Chinese dissidents, pro-democracy advocates, members of Falun Gong, non-governmental organizations in the U.S., as well as his employers. In November 2024, Li was sentenced to 48 months in prison, a $250,000 fine and three years of supervised release after his prison term. •
December 2024: The U.S. Department of Justice arrested Los Angeles resident Yaoning "Mike" Sun for acting as an illegal PRC agent to influence U.S. local politicians on issues related to Taiwan and Falun Gong. Sun, who served as a campaign manager and business partner for a Southern California politician, was also charged with conspiring with John Chen, previously sentenced for acting as an illegal PRC agent and targeting U.S.-based Falun Gong practitioners. One of their goals was to undermine U.S. support for Falun Gong and pro-democracy movements. In October 2025, Sun agreed to plead guilty to acting as an illegal agent for the Chinese government, and was sentenced to four years in prison in February 2026. •
March 2025: Quanzhong An, a 58-year-old Chinese citizen and legal U.S. resident, was sentenced to 20 months in prison after pleading guilty in 2024 to acting as an illegal
foreign agent. He was involved in a transnational Operation Fox Hunt campaign aimed at coercing a former manager of a Chinese state-owned company to return to China. •
April 2025: Private investigator and former New York police sergeant Michael McMahon was sentenced to 18 months following a 2023 conviction. He was convicted at trial for aiding and abetting in a transcontinental campaign pressuring the return of expatriate Xu Jin, a former Chinese official residing in the U.S. McMahon had searched databases and conducted surveillance to gather information on Xu. McMahon was among ten who were charged for this operation, which the U.S. deemed an Operation Fox Hunt campaign. •
April 2025:
Swedish authorities arrested Dilshat Reshit, a Uyghur resident of
Stockholm, on suspicion of spying on the Uyghur diaspora in Sweden on behalf of China. According to the
World Uyghur Congress, Reshit had served as its Chinese-language spokesperson since 2004. The World Uyghur Congress removed Reshit and issued a warning about the extensive influence of Chinese espionage networks. •
July 2025: Officials from the Chinese Embassy in Bangkok
demanded the removal of art deemed offensive to China in a
Bangkok Art and Culture Centre (BACC) exhibition on authoritarian governments titled "Constellation of Complicity: Visualising the Global Machinery of Authoritarian Solidarity". Acting through Thailand's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
Bangkok Metropolitan Administration, several pieces of art created by Uyghur, Tibetan, and Hong Kong artists were removed or had the names of the artists blacked out. •
November 2025: The IndieChina film festival was canceled after numerous filmmakers pulled their films out of the screenings, citing Chinese government pressure on their families. •
November 2025: In 2025, a
Kazakhstan court convicted 19 Kazakhstan citizens who are activists from the Nagyz Atajurt Volunteers Group over a November 2025 protest in
Almaty criticizing alleged human rights abuses in Xinjiang. A day after the protest, the Chinese consulate in Almaty urged Kazakh authorities to act, prompting local authorities to file criminal charges of “inciting discord” and raising concerns about limits on peaceful protest and possible external pressure. •
May 2026:
Access Now said that the Chinese government pressured
Zambia to cancel
RightsCon 2026 a week before the conference was scheduled to take place unless Taiwanese participants were banned. The
World Press Freedom Day conference later in the month also had its schedule disrupted. == Responses ==