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American woman indicted in China on charges of spying

BEIJING -- An American woman detained in China for more than a year has been indicted by prosecutors on charges of spying, a court confirmed Tuesday.

The Nanning Intermediate People's Court in southern China accepted the case against Phan "Sandy" Phan-Gillis on July 11, and no date has been set yet for a hearing, said a court official who gave only her surname, Chen.

Authorities detained the international business consultant in March 2015 when she visited China as part of an American trade delegation that was promoting business opportunities in her hometown of Houston, Texas.

Phan-Gillis' husband, Jeff Gillis, said Monday that her lawyer received the indictment "weeks after it was issued to the court."

He said in a statement that she is charged with being a spy for a foreign government from 1996 to 1998, and that the charges are "absolutely false."

Spying convictions carry a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.

A U.N. panel ruled in June that China was arbitrarily detaining Phan-Gillis, 56, in violation of international human rights norms because she hadn't been brought before judicial authorities or given access to legal assistance.

A State Department official told CBS News:  "We remain deeply concerned about Ms. Phan-Gillis' welfare, and have repeatedly pressed Chinese authorities to provide further details of the case and to give U.S. consular officers full and unfettered access to her."

"My wife is not a spy my wife is not a thief," Jeff Gillis told CBS affiliate KHOU in September. "She is a hard working businesswoman who's done of good for this town and for America. Let's get her back."

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