Freed Japan-China friendship group head says charges false

Hideji Suzuki, former president of the Japan China youth exchange association, speaks at a news conference in Tokyo, Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2022. Suzuki, who recently returned home from six years in a Beijing prison on spying charges, said he came forward to raise alarm over China’s “serious human rights problems†as the country increasingly becomes influential. (AP Photo/Hiro Komae)

TOKYO (AP) — The former head of a Japan-China friendship group who recently returned to Japan from six years in a Beijing prison for what he said were false spying charges said he still hopes to see China become a global leader but with better treatment of human rights.

Hideji Suzuki, former president of the Japan-China Youth Exchange Association, said he devoted himself to promoting friendship between the two countries and visited China more than 200 times since the 1980s.

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