China has Arrested an EU Citizen, German Ambassador Alarmed

Photo: Handout

China’s detention of Swedish book publisher Gui Minhai while he was being accompanied by Swedish diplomats could set a dangerous precedent for other E.U. citizens, Germany’s ambassador to China said Tuesday.

Michael Clauss said all European countries with diplomatic representation in Beijing were concerned about China’s actions and “stood behind Sweden” in its efforts to secure Mr. Gui’s release and in condemning his arrest.

“That China’s authorities treat an E.U. citizen this way is without precedence. There is a widespread fear that these violations of international laws, as well as (China’s) refusal to allow consular assistance, could happen to other EU citizens in the future,” Mr. Clauss told German daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung and Swedish daily Expressen.

Mr. Gui, 53, was arrested on a train to Beijing just over two weeks ago while being assisted by two Swedish diplomats — the second time he has disappeared in murky circumstances into Chinese custody.

Sweden, the European Union, and the United States have called for his release but Chinese authorities have given scant information about Mr. Gui’s legal status.

Sweden’s Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom on Monday called the seizure a “brutal intervention” that was “in contravention of basic international rules on consular support.”

Mr. Gui was one of five Hong Kong-based booksellers — known for publishing gossipy titles about Chinese political leaders — who disappeared in 2015 and resurfaced in mainland China.

Mr. Gui was on holiday in Thailand at the time. He eventually surfaced at an undisclosed location in China, confessing to involvement in a fatal traffic accident and smuggling illegal books into the mainland.

Chinese authorities declared they had released him in October but his daughter Angela Gui, 23, told AFP that he was under “loose house arrest” in the eastern mainland city of Ningbo.

Angela Gui said she fears he may now be put on trial and receive a longer sentence, jeopardizing his health.

Doctors in Ningbo said her father may have the neurological disease ALS — he had been on his way to Beijing to see a Swedish specialist.

“If he does have ALS, perhaps he might not have that much time left,” she told AFP.

The rights of journalists, overall, has continued to decline last year in China.

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