UPDATE 8-China court gives Australian writer Yang Hengjun suspended death sentence

(Updates with details of sentence, paragraph 7; wife in court for verdict, paragraph 8)

By Kirsty Needham and Laurie Chen

SYDNEY/BEIJING, Feb 5 (Reuters) - A Beijing court on Monday handed Australian writer Yang Hengjun a suspended death sentence on espionage charges, threatening a recent rebound in bilateral ties that followed several years of strained relations between Beijing and Canberra.

The sentence, handed down five years after Yang was detained in China and three years after his closed-door trial on espionage charges, shocked his family and supporters.

It also threatens a recent warming of relations between Australia and China, analysts say, which until late last year had been marred by tensions over trade, COVID-19 and China's security posture.

Yang, a pro-democracy blogger, is an Australian citizen born in China who was working in New York before his arrest at Guangzhou airport in 2019. An employee of China's Ministry of State Security from 1989-1999, he had been accused of spying for a country China has not publicly identified, and the details of the case against him have not been made public.

Wang Wenbin, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson, told reporters in Beijing that Yang had been found guilty of espionage and "sentenced to death with two years probation, and it was ordered that all his personal properties be confiscated".

Wang added that "the Australian side" was allowed to sit in on the sentencing and that all procedures were followed.

A suspended death sentence in China gives the accused

a two-year reprieve

from being executed, after which it is automatically converted to life imprisonment, or more rarely, fixed-term imprisonment. The individual remains in prison throughout.

Yang's wife was in court to hear the verdict, said Sydney-based scholar Feng Chongyi, a longtime friend of Yang's who called it a "serious case of injustice", adding that Yang had denied the charges.

"He is punished by the Chinese government for his criticism of human rights abuses in China and his advocacy for universal values such as human rights, democracy and rule of law," Feng said.

He urged the Australian government to seek medical parole for Yang, saying five years of detention had taken a heavy toll on his health.

Australia is "appalled" at the court's decision and had called in China's ambassador, Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said.

Wong said the Australian government understood the sentence can be commuted to life imprisonment after two years if the individual does not commit any serious crimes in that period.