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Beijing blasts U.S. travel alert as Hong Kong enforces device-password disclosure rule

Mar 30, 2026
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Beijing blasts U.S. travel alert as Hong Kong enforces device-password disclosure rule
China and the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) have moved swiftly to rebut a weekend security alert issued by the U.S. Consulate General in Hong Kong that warned American citizens to be prepared to surrender mobile-device passwords if detained under Hong Kong’s updated National Security Law (NSL) implementation rules. The diplomatic spat stems from amendments gazetted on 23 March that criminalise refusal to provide “relevant information or assistance”—including passcodes or de-encryption help—when devices are seized in an NSL investigation. Penalties run as high as HK $100,000 (US $12,700) and six months’ imprisonment. While the legal change is narrowly targeted at national-security cases, business groups and foreign chambers say the wording is broad enough that routine border inspections could become more intrusive, raising concerns about executive travel, trade-secret exposure and data-privacy compliance. On 26 March the U.S. mission urged travellers to contact the consulate “immediately” if detained or asked to unlock devices, adding the alert to its STEP (Smart Traveler Enrollment Program) feed. Beijing’s Office of the Commissioner of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs responded on 29 March, summoning Consul General Julie Eadeh to denounce the notice as “interference in China’s internal affairs” and insisting that law-enforcement officers must still obtain a court warrant before searching electronics.

Beijing blasts U.S. travel alert as Hong Kong enforces device-password disclosure rule


For travellers seeking extra peace of mind before departure, VisaHQ’s Hong Kong portal (https://www.visahq.com/hong-kong/) offers real-time visa guidance, document checklists and pre-trip compliance reviews, helping executives and leisure visitors alike prepare for any new requirements that emerge under the evolving NSL rules.

The HKSAR Security Bureau echoed that defence, but critics note that magistrates can grant warrants ex-parte and that travellers have little practical recourse at the checkpoint. For multinationals the episode is more than a war of words. Corporate mobility teams are reviewing device-handling protocols for staff transiting Hong Kong or relocating to the city. Several firms told Global Mobility News they will re-issue guidance to executives to carry travel phones stripped of sensitive IP or to use cloud-only storage with remote-wipe capability. Duty-of-care specialists say companies should log the IMEI numbers of employee devices entering Hong Kong to demonstrate ownership and facilitate consular assistance if seized. In the longer term, mobility managers must weigh the reputational and compliance risks against Hong Kong’s enduring advantages—robust transport links, a simple tax regime and proximity to mainland supply chains. “The business case for a Hong Kong hub is still strong, but the personal-data calculus just changed,” a regional HR director for a U.S. semiconductor firm said.

Hong Konge Visas & Immigration Team @ VisaHQ

VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.

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