The U.S. Department of Justice has accused Chinese executives of an American IT company that provides video conferencing systems on suspicion of interfering with a video conference on the Tiananmen Square incident in China, which was planned on the Internet, in cooperation with the Chinese government. Announced.

According to the US Department of Justice, in June, 31 years after the Tiananmen Square Incident in China, American individuals and groups planned multiple video conferencing online using the video conferencing system of an American IT company.



The Justice Department said a 39-year-old Chinese executive working for the IT company had been accused of harassing the man by the 18th, alleging that he had cooperated with the Chinese government to disrupt and suspend at least four meetings. That is.



The Justice Department has pointed out that the man is based in China and is in charge of passing customer information to the Chinese government and monitoring the Chinese government for inconvenient meetings, and detained him. In order to do so, we publish photos and call for information.



The name of the IT company in which the man works has not been announced, but some media reports that it is "Zoom," which operates a video conferencing system.



Zoom admitted that it had temporarily suspended the account of the organizer of the video conference on the Tiananmen Square incident in June, and said that the prosecution was "currently being scrutinized" by NHK. I answered.