Hong Kong presses Beijing on case of
missing booksellers
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[June 21, 2016]
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong's
leader said on Tuesday he had asked China whether its handling of the
booksellers case violated the "one country, two systems" formula under
which the city returned to Chinese rule, the strongest response yet from
the former British colony.
Chief Executive C.Y. Leung told the Executive Council he had
written a letter to Beijing asking whether mainland authorities
enforced their laws across the border in Hong Kong.
Thousands marched in Hong Kong on Saturday to protest against
China's detention of five booksellers whose Hong Kong shop published
gossipy books about Chinese leaders, including President Xi Jinping,
in what critics called "cross-border abductions".
The arrests prompted fears Beijing may be eroding the "one country,
two systems" system under which Hong Kong has been governed as a
special administrative region since its return to China from British
rule in 1997.
One of the booksellers, Lam Wing-kee, said this week he had been
held in captivity for eight months by Chinese agents. [L4N19C1AG]
Leung said he sought assurance in the letter that if Hong Kong
residents are detained on the mainland, their legal rights are
protected and questioned whether an existing Hong Kong-mainland
notification system was transparent enough.
"Did the handling of the incident hinder the 'one country, two
systems' principle and the Basic Law protecting Hong Kong residents'
freedom and rights, especially the freedom of expression,
publication and personal safety?" he said.
Hong Kong's freedoms are protected by the Basic Law, a
mini-constitution that includes the "inviolable" freedom of Hong
Kong people from arbitrary arrest and search.
Beijing's Liaison Office in Hong Kong did not immediately respond to
a request for comment. Chinese authorities have repeatedly said they
would never do anything illegal and that Hong Kong's autonomy is
fully respected.
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Bookseller Lam Wing-kee (C) takes part in a protest march with
pro-democracy lawmakers and supporters in Hong Kong, China June 18,
2016. REUTERS/Bobby Yip
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying, when asked about
the case, said China abided by the "one country, two systems" policy
and that Hong Kong residents enjoyed full rights and freedoms.
A number of Western governments, including Britain, voiced concerns
this year that Chinese-born British national Lee Bo, who went
missing from Hong Kong in late December, had been abducted.
Hong Kong protesters on Saturday chanted "protect freedom of the
press, freedom of publishing and freedom of speech" as they marched
from the Causeway Bay Books shop to the Liaison Office.
They also demanded the release of Gui Minhai, a Swedish passport
holder who disappeared from the Thai resort of Pattaya last October
and is the only one of the five still in detention in China.
(Reporting by Farah Master and Sharon Shi; Additional reporting by
Megha Rajagopalan in Beijing; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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