Los Angeles Times

A bookstore with missing owners

Public outcry in Hong Kong has grown amid signs that China may have taken the men by extralegal means.

- By Violet Law Law is a special correspond­ent.

BEIJING — When Lee Bo, co-owner of Causeway Bay Books in Hong Kong, recently failed to come home for dinner, his wife grew concerned and filed a police report.

But days later, she withdrew the missing person report, saying only that a friend of her husband’s had relayed to her that Lee was safe and sound. Hong Kong officials say his whereabout­s remains unknown.

Lee, who was last seen a week ago, was the most recent of several local citizens — all affiliated with the bookstore, which specialize­s in titles that irritate China’s communist leadership — believed to have been detained on the mainland, raising concern among Hong Kong legislator­s and residents.

The public outcry has grown as signs have mounted that Lee may have been taken from Hong Kong into mainland China by extralegal means.

“Mainland Chinese authoritie­s owe the Hong Kong government an answer. Right now they have yet to confirm or deny if these men are being held,” said James To, a lawmaker in the semiautono­mous Chinese territory of 7 million.

Hong Kong and China’s central government have establishe­d a reciprocal mechanism under which one jurisdicti­on is supposed to report to the other if the latter’s residents are being detained across the border. So far, no report has been made on the bookstore workers.

Hong Kong, a former British colony, returned to Chinese rule in 1997 under a “one country, two systems” arrangemen­t designed to protect many civil liberties nonexisten­t in the rest of the country.

Hong Kong’s protection of free speech has given rise to a cottage publishing industry churning out explosive exposes on China’s politics past and present. Recently, the political climate in mainland China has chilled, with mass arrests of rights activists, political dissidents and human rights lawyers. Even so, the disappeara­nce of the bookstore employees has sent alarm through Hong Kong.

Lee was last seen a week ago at the store’s off-site warehouse on his way to deliver books to a new customer.

Hong Kong’s Beijingbac­ked chief executive, Leung Chun-ying, said that the government was highly concerned about the case but that there was “no indication” Chinese authoritie­s were responsibl­e.

“If mainland Chinese law enforcemen­t personnel are carrying out duties in Hong Kong, it would be unacceptab­le,” Leung said.

A letter faxed to a bookstore employee said Lee had gone to the mainland “by [his] own way” to “cooperate in an investigat­ion by certain parties.” The document also said his “circumstan­ces are very good and everything is normal.”

But Hong Kong’s immigratio­n department has said there’s no record of Lee leaving the territory.

“This letter, that is meant to dispel fear about his disappeara­nce, has exactly the opposite effect,” said Ching Cheong, a longtime local commentato­r on China’s politics. “All isn’t well.”

In early November, Lee raised concern about the disappeara­nces of three colleagues who had visited mainland China. His fellow co-owner, Lui Por, and two employees went missing in late October.

Another co-owner, Gui Minhai, a prolific author and Swedish national, went missing Oct. 22, a week or so before he had planned to fly from his resort home in Thailand to Hong Kong for business.

After Lee disappeare­d, he called his wife twice to ask her to keep quiet but refused to divulge his location, according to local news reports.

Before Lee’s disappeara­nce, Hong Kong police said missing-person reports had been filed on the other three Hong Kong citizens by family members and colleagues. Those will now be combined with Lee’s case for continuing investigat­ion. Even though Lee’s wife has withdrawn her report, police said, the case remains open until Lee is found.

The Global Times, a newspaper closely affiliated with China’s Communist Party, this week took aim at those raising questions regarding the men’s whereabout­s. In a strident editorial, the paper said the incidents had been “hyped up” by people who “cannot wait to define the case as a ‘violation of one country, two systems.’ ”

“Causeway Bay Books almost only publishes and sells mainland-related political books, many of which contain maliciousl­y fabricated content,” the paper said, asserting that Lee was “assisting an investigat­ion” and “was not taken away by mainland Chinese police.” The paper added: “Those books have through various channels entered the mainland and have become a source of certain political rumors.”

Li Dan, a Beijing-based publisher who owns a bookstore that specialize­s in mainland Chinese politics in a popular Hong Kong shopping district, surmised that the disappeara­nces may have to do with more than just publishing titles deemed unsavory by authoritie­s.

What is more worrisome to Li is that mainland Chinese customs officials have stepped up searches for banned books over the last year after Hong Kong’s prodemocra­cy demonstrat­ions. Such titles used to be popular souvenirs for mainlander­s visiting Hong Kong.

Mainlander­s who work for the government can be blackliste­d if they are found in possession of such books, and sales recently have plunged as the number of mainlander­s visiting Hong Kong has dropped.

To save on operating costs, his bookstore has since curtailed hours to weekends.

Many Hong Kongers fear the disappeara­nces of the bookstore employees might signal the erosion of the territory’s autonomy.

“The bottom line used to be whatever you do in Hong Kong, it is still a safe haven,” said Ching. “Now you’re no longer safe.”

‘If mainland Chinese law enforcemen­t personnel are carrying out duties in Hong Kong, it would be unacceptab­le.’ — Leung Chun-ying, Hong Kong chief executive

 ?? Anthony Wallace AFP/Getty Images ?? HONG KONG’S Causeway Bay Books specialize­s in works that irritate China’s communist leadership. Three co-owners of the bookstore have gone missing.
Anthony Wallace AFP/Getty Images HONG KONG’S Causeway Bay Books specialize­s in works that irritate China’s communist leadership. Three co-owners of the bookstore have gone missing.
 ?? Philippe Lopez AFP/Getty Images ?? FREE SPEECH protection­s in Hong Kong have fueled publicatio­n of exposes on China’s politics.
Philippe Lopez AFP/Getty Images FREE SPEECH protection­s in Hong Kong have fueled publicatio­n of exposes on China’s politics.

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