Bookseller who went missing from Pattaya says he turned himself into Chinese authorities

A Hong Kong-based bookseller who went missing from his holiday home in Pattaya last October has turned up in China and claimed he “voluntarily” turned himself into authorities there.

Swedish national Gui Minhai, whose mysterious disappearance sparked fears he had been abducted by Chinese agents, said he had voluntarily returned to China to answer a conviction from 2004 for killing a student during a drink-driving accident, Chinese state media said yesterday.

“I am returning to surrender by personal choice, it has nothing to do with anyone,” Gui, looking distraught, said in a China Central Television (CCTV) broadcast. “This is a personal responsibility that I ought to bear.”

 

Gui, a naturalized Swedish citizen, is one of five members to have gone missing from a Hong Kong bookstore that specialises in selling gossipy political books on China’s ruling Communist Party leaders.

The disappearances, and China’s silence, have prompted fears that mainland Chinese authorities may be using shadowy tactics that erode the “one country, two systems” formula under which Hong Kong has been governed since its return to China from British rule in 1997.

In recent years, state media has publicised a string of what is presented as confessions made by high-profile suspects. Critics say these accounts deprive the accused of the right to a fair trial.

Earlier this month, the Swedish Foreign Ministry said it had raised Gui’s case with the Chinese ambassador to Stockholm.

Gui’s daughter Angela, who is based in Britain, told Reuters late yesterday she believed the Swedish authorities were doing everything they could to help with the case.

It was not possible to contact Gui and it remains unclear whether he has a lawyer.

Angela Gui said she could not confirm what was being reported but that she still believed her father had been abducted and his detention was related to his work.

“There’s got to be a reason it happened now and that the others were taken as well,” she said.

Gui Minhai cautioned in the report “any individual or organisation” against intervening or “engaging in malicious speculation”.

His confession was broadcast last night on CCTV, which called it an “exclusive interview”. The official Xinhua News Agency published a separate report.

Gui, who holds a Swedish passport, “surrendered to public security organs” in October, Xinhua said, without providing details about his surrender or transport from Thailand.

He was sentenced to two years imprisonment, suspended for two years, after killing a female student in the coastal city of Ningbo while driving drunk, the report said.

Gui fled in August 2006 and his two-year probation was revoked. He is now suspected of other crimes, the report said.

“Although I have Swedish citizenship, I truly feel I’m Chinese, my roots are still in China. So I hope that Sweden will respect my personal choice, respect my rights and privacy and let me solve my own problems,” Gui said.

The five missing booksellers include Lee Bo, a British passport holder who disappeared from Hong Kong at the end of last month.

Hong Kong leader Leung Chun-ying said today the government was taking the case seriously and would continue to investigate the circumstances of those missing.

Leung’s comments came after a Hong Kong-based Chinese official expressed concern on Friday at the disappearances but warned investigations were “complicated”.

Another official, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, said on Jan. 5 that Lee was “first and foremost a Chinese citizen” and called on others not to make “groundless accusations”.

In a handwritten note dated Jan. 3 and purportedly written and signed by Lee, he wrote that he had travelled back to China in order to assist with an unspecified “investigation”. Photos of the note were circulated widely on social and Hong Kong media but couldn’t be verified by Reuters.

Story: Reuters

Related:

Thailand blasted for deporting Chinese dissidents

4 missing from Hong Kong publisher known for its scandalous books on Chinese officials



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