Chinese authorities questioned Bain & Co. employees in Shanghai, the company stated, less than a month after Chinese police detained staff and raided the office of another U.S. due diligence firm in Beijing.
A Bain spokesperson told The Epoch Times on April 27 that “the Chinese authorities have questioned staff in our Shanghai office.”
“We are cooperating as appropriate with the Chinese authorities. At this time, we have no further comment,” the spokesperson said in an email.
According to the company’s website, Bain opened its office in the financial hub in 2004. It also runs offices in Beijing and Hong Kong.
New York-based Mintz Group told Reuters on March 24 that it “has not received any official legal notice regarding a case against the company and has requested that the authorities release its employees.”
Days later, Mao Ning, spokesperson of China’s Foreign Ministry, told reporters that Mintz Group “is suspected of illegal business operations.”
Mintz Group didn’t respond by press time to a request by The Epoch Times for comment.
The scrutiny of U.S. firms comes as the new Chinese Communist Party leadership tried to assure foreign businesses that China would continue to open up and welcome foreign investment.
“Last year was particularly challenging for our member companies, as they dealt with China’s economic slowdown, zero-COVID control measures, and ongoing efforts to ensure compliance with various new U.S. and China-related regulations,” Colm Rafferty, chairman of AmCham China, told Reuters.
“We are concerned about a recent uptick in coercive actions targeting U.S. firms, which comes at the same moment that China states that it is reopening for foreign investment,” Yellen told the audience at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies in Washington.