The Herald (South Africa)

Bookseller who fled Hong Kong attacked with paint

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A Hong Kong bookseller who fled to Taiwan amid fears of Chinese persecutio­n was attacked yesterday by a man who threw red paint at him, just days before he was set to open a new bookshop in Taipei.

Lam Wing-kee, who sought refuge in Taiwan last year after he was detained by Chinese agents in 2015 while working at a bookshop in Hong Kong that sold books critical of the Chinese leadership, had red paint poured over him in a Taipei cafe.

The attack came days after Hong Kong police launched a surprise crackdown on pro-democracy activists.

A growing number of protesters have been fleeing Chinese-ruled Hong Kong to democratic Taiwan, which has repeatedly rejected Beijing’s proposals to rule the island with the “one country, two systems” model it uses for Hong Kong.

Taiwan has also voiced its strong support for the Hong Kong protesters.

“I was attacked with red paint in the cafe,” Lam said while assisting the police with their investigat­ion.

“Some people don’t want me to open the bookshop in Taiwan,” he said, describing the attack as a threat by supporters of Beijing.

Police are hunting for the assailant and reviewing security camera footage from the scene.

Lam’s incarcerat­ion was part of a co-ordinated operation by China’s security apparatus that led to five bookseller­s disappeari­ng from locations in China, Hong Kong and Thailand in late 2015, and later showing up in Chinese detention where they were forced to make confession­s on public television.

The case generated huge controvers­y, and undermined public confidence in China’s commitment to preserving Hong Kong’s freedoms.

Before it was shut down by authoritie­s in Hong Kong, Lam’s Causeway Bay Books had become a symbol of resistance to perceived Chinese encroachme­nts on Hong Kong liberties.

His new shop in Taipei will bear the same name.

Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council, which oversees the island’s policy towards China, condemned the attack. —

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