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China sentences Swedish bookseller to 10 years jail

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BEIJING: China has sentenced Swedish book publisher Gui Minhai to 10 years in prison on charges of illegally providing intelligence abroad and claimed him as a citizen, prompting Stockholm to call for his release in a case that has rattled diplomatic relations.


Gui, one of five Hong Kong-based booksellers known for publishing salacious titles about China’s political leaders, was snatched by authorities while on a train to Beijing in February 2018, the second time he disappeared into mainland custody.


A court in the eastern city of Ningbo said Chinese-born Gui was sentenced Monday to 10 years in jail, and claimed he had also voluntarily reinstated his Chinese citizenship in 2018.


Since Beijing does not recognise dual citizenship, “China, according to law, only recognises him as a Chinese citizen”, foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said Tuesday.


But Swedish Foreign Minister Ann Linde on Tuesday said in a statement that Stockholm continues to call for Gui’s release and “demand access to our citizen to give him the consular support he has the right to”.


The Swedish foreign ministry said that citizenship can “only be renounced after an examination and a decision by the Swedish Migration Agency” and that Gui remained a citizen.


Gui first vanished in 2015 while on holiday in Thailand and eventually surfaced at an undisclosed location in China, confessing to involvement in a fatal traffic accident and smuggling illegal books.


He served two years in prison, but three months after his October 2017 release he was again arrested — while on a train to Beijing accompanied by Swedish diplomats.


His supporters and family claim his detention is part of a political repression campaign.


“He hasn’t done anything wrong, he just published some books,” said Lam Wing-kee, another Hong Kong bookseller previously detained by Chinese authorities.


“Obviously (it) is meant as a warning to those who oppose China’’.


The Ningbo court also sentenced Gui to five years of “deprivation of political rights” — which in practice means he cannot lead state-owned enterprises or hold positions in state organs.


Zhao said Gui’s alleged crime “seriously damages China’s national security and interests”.


“China resolutely opposes any country, any organisation, and anyone’s using any form to interfere in China’s internal affairs and judicial sovereignty,” he said.


A video released by China three weeks after Gui’s disappearance showed him purportedly confessing wrongdoing and blaming Sweden for “sensationalising” his case and “instigating” law-breaking behaviour.


Gui’s friend, dissident poet Bei Ling, said at the time that Gui’s confession was likely made under coercion.


Chinese criminal suspects often appear in videotaped “confessions” that rights groups say sometimes bear the hallmarks of official arm-twisting.


The Ningbo court’s decision to highlight Gui’s citizenship was “obviously politically motivated” and intended to stop Swedish assistance to Gui, Amnesty International researcher Patrick Poon told AFP.


Gui’s detention has put a strain on relations between Sweden and China in recent years, with Stockholm repeatedly calling for his release.


China called off two business delegation visits to Sweden after Culture Minister Amanda Lind defied a Chinese threat of “counter-measures” and presented a rights prize to Gui in November. — AFP


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