The US statement does not accord with facts and foreign journalists in China should observe laws in the country, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesman Hong Lei said in response to the criticism.
"China expresses its displeasure" over the White House remarks, Hong said in his statement.
"China does not accept the unjustifiable accusations by the US side, and demands the US side to respect facts and take cautious words and acts," he said, adding that the Chinese side urged the US side to "do more conducive to media exchanges and mutual trust between the two countries."
"The United States is deeply concerned that foreign journalists in China continue to face restrictions that impede their ability to do their jobs," White House press secretary Jay Carney said in a statement yesterday.
"These restrictions and treatment are not consistent with freedom of the press and stand in stark contrast with US treatment of Chinese and other foreign journalists," he said.
This is perhaps the first time US government publicly criticised the denial of visas to American journalists after some of them joined media outlets like the New York Times (NYT) last year.
The reasons for the denial of visas according to US media have been attributed to NYT's reports on former Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao's family assets amounting to USD 2.7 billion.
A similar report by Bloomberg alleged President Xi Jinping's family too had a large asset base.
China termed these allegations as smear campaigns.
Austin Ramzy who earlier worked for Time magazine in China has not been given media accreditation for 2014 after he joined NYT.
Similarly, last year Chris Barkley, the China correspondent of Reuters, failed to get a work visa in China after he joined NYT. He has been working from Hong Kong ever since.
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