The Phnom Penh Post

Anger over snatching of bookseller by Chinese

-

RIGHTS campaigner­s slammed as “appalling” yesterday the disappeara­nce of dissident publisher Gui Minhai after his daughter revealed he had been snatched again in mainland China, the latest person ensnared in Beijing’s crackdown on civil society.

Rights have come under increasing pressure since President Xi Jinping took power in 2012, with widespread arrests of lawyers and activists.

Gui, a Swedish citizen, was one of five Hong Kong-based bookseller­s, known for salacious titles about the lives of China’s political elite, who went missing in 2015 and resurfaced in detention on the mainland.

Chinese authoritie­s said they had released Gui in October, but it was unclear to what extent he was a free man.

His daughter Angela Gui told Radio Sweden that since her father’s official release from detention, he had been put in a police-managed flat under surveillan­ce. She said that he had then been snatched by plain clothes police on Saturday while on a train to Beijing from the eastern city of Ningbo, where he was living, while accompanie­d by two Swedish diplomats.

Her father had been travelling to Beijing to see a Swedish doctor as he was showing symptoms of the neurologic­al disease ALS – also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease – she added.

“At one of the stops before Beijing there were about 10 men in plain clothes that came in and said they were from the police and just grabbed him and just took him away and after that I have not heard anything,” she told Radio Sweden.

The New York Times also reported that Gui had been taken in the presence of two Swedish diplomats. The Swedish Foreign Ministry said it was “fully aware” of what had happened to Gui, without giving details.

Ministry spokesman Patric Nilsson told AFP that “forceful measures have been taken at a high political level”.

Rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal described the incident as “absolutely appalling” and called for Gui to be released and allowed to seek medical treatment.

The fact that he had been snatched in front of diplomats should be a “wake up call” to the internatio­nal community, said Amnesty’s China researcher­William Nee.

Literary society and activist group PEN Hong Kong expressed “highest concern” over Gui’s latest disappeara­nce.

“It is now important for foreign government­s, particular­ly the Swedes and the European Union, to respond with strong actions,” Human Rights Watch said in a statement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia