UrsulaGauthier_China_Dec2015
Ursula Gauthier, a French journalist of the weekly l'Obs news magazine, gestures as a poster of China's President Xi Jinping is seen in the background during an interview with Reuters in Beijing, China, on Dec. 29, 2015. Gauthier will be the first reporter in over three years to be forced to leave China due to a refusal by authorities to renew accreditation. Reuters/Kim Kyung-Hoon

A French journalist is being forced to leave China after the government said it would not renew her press credentials for the new year in response to a critical report on Beijing's policies in the troubled western region of Xinjiang.

The departure of Ursula Gauthier, a reporter for the French current affairs magazine L'Obs, will mark the first time in more than three years that a journalist has been forced to leave China due to a refusal by authorities to renew accreditation.

China's foreign ministry said on Saturday that Gauthier could no longer work in China because she did not make a public apology for an article she wrote on Nov. 18.

Hours after Chinese President Xi Jinping told his French counterpart, Francois Hollande, that China stood by France in the wake of the Paris attacks in November, the article said, China's public security ministry announced the capture of suspects over a coal mine attack in September in Xinjiang.

On Nov. 20, the government announced that security forces in Xinjiang had killed 28 "terrorists" from a group that carried out a deadly attack at a coal mine in September under the direction of "foreign extremists". The government has given no details of the composition of the group.

Reuters has not been able to independently verify that the suspects were Muslim Uighurs, or if they had a role in the mine attack due to tight government reporting restrictions in Xinjiang.

Hundreds of people have died in unrest in Xinjiang, home to the Uighurs, and other parts of China over the past three years.

"Beautiful solidarity, but not entirely free of ulterior motives," Gauthier wrote in her article.

On Saturday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said Gauthier's article "openly supports terrorist activity, the killing of innocents and has outraged the Chinese public".

Gauthier said the government's decision would mean that she would have to leave Beijing on a 1 a.m. flight on Friday to Paris.

Gauthier, who has been based in China for six years, said she met officials from China's foreign ministry three times starting in late November after the state-run Global Times published a commentary criticizing the article she had written on China's policy in Xinjiang in the wake of attacks in Paris.

Gauthier, who said she had received death threats after her report, told Reuters she had told the foreign ministry that the Global Times had distorted the meaning of her article.

"They wanted me to apologize publicly for my wrongs," Gauthier said. "But I said my wrongs were all invented by the Global Times. I cannot apologize for crimes I did not commit."

When asked to confirm the meetings, Lu said that the ministry did not want to "publicize the situation". He noted that Gauthier did not call the police.

"This is not that usual, unless she's got other considerations," he said at a regular news briefing.

Gauthier said she did not report the death threats as she "did not expect the police to take the case seriously".

The Global Times declined to comment when contacted by Reuters.

France's ambassador to China, Maurice Gourdault-Montagne, has raised Gauthier's case with China's foreign ministry, said a spokeswoman for the French embassy in Beijing.

China requires all foreign journalists to renew their accreditation annually.

In May 2012, Melissa Chan, a reporter for Al Jazeera's English language channel in Beijing, was forced to leave China after authorities refused to renew her press credentials over unspecified alleged violations of Chinese regulations - the first such case in 13 years at the time.