Chattanooga Times Free Press

Friend says Hong Kong bookseller Gui freed

- BY KELVIN CHAN

HONG KONG — Mainland Chinese authoritie­s have released a detained Hong Kong bookseller and he has been reunited with his relatives, one of his friends said Friday.

Chinese dissident poet Bei Ling said family members confirmed to him that Gui Minhai has been released, days after the Chinese and Swedish government­s made similar announceme­nts but provided few details.

Gui, a Swedish citizen, was one of five employees of a Hong Kong bookshop specializi­ng in salacious tales about high-level Chinese politics who were believed to have been abducted and spirited to the mainland two years ago.

China-born Gui disappeare­d from his Thai holiday home while the four other men, who have already been released, were last seen in Hong Kong.

Their case reinforced rising concerns about rule of law being undermined in the semiautono­mous Chinese city, which is promised civil liberties such as freedom of speech until 2047. The books the men sold from their Causeway Bay Bookshop were popular with visiting tourists from mainland China, where such titles are banned.

Bei said he was informed that Gui is in the eastern city of Ningbo and is spending time with his elderly mother and two sisters.

He added that it’s still unclear whether Gui enjoys genuine liberty or whether he’s still under the control of authoritie­s.

“I cannot say free; I just say he’s out of jail and is now with his family” in Ningbo, Bei said by phone from Boston. “I think he now cannot talk with [anyone] outside, only with family.”

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