Gui Minhai

Gui Minhai
Chinese name 桂民海
Pinyin guì mín hǎi (Mandarin)
Yale gwái man hōi (Cantonese)
Birth name 桂敏海
Ethnicity Han Chinese
Born 5 May 1964
Ningbo
Occupation writer, publisher
Years active 2006–
Alma mater Peking University (bachelor 1985), University of Gothenburg (MA 1990, PhD 1996)[1]
Website freeguiminhai.org
Also known as Michael Gui, Ah Hai (阿海)
This is a Chinese name; the family name is Gui.

Gui Minhai (Chinese:桂敏海 or 桂民海),[2] also known as Michael Gui,[3] (born 5 May 1964 in Ningbo, Zhejiang)[1] is a Chinese-born Swedish scholar and book publisher. He is a prolific author on books about Chinese politics and political figures. Gui authored around 200 books during his ten-year career under the pen name Ah Hai (阿海).[1][4][5][6][7] and is one of three shareholders of Causeway Bay Books in Hong Kong.

Gui went missing in Thailand in late 2015, one of five men who vanished in a string of incidents known as the Causeway Bay Books disappearances. The case ignited fears locally and in Britain over the collapse of "one country, two systems", over the possibility that people could be subject to rendition from Hong Kong and from other countries by Chinese law enforcement.[8][9] The Chinese government was silent about holding him in custody for three months, at which point a controversial video confession was broadcast on mainland media.[10] In it, Gui said that he had returned to mainland China and surrendered to the authorities of his own volition. He appeared indicate that he was prepared to follow the course of justice in China, whilst waiving protection as a Swedish citizen.[10][11][12]

Many observers expressed doubts as to the sincerity and credibility of Gui's confession.[13][14][15][16] The Washington Post described the narrative as "messy and incoherent, blending possible fact with what seems like outright fiction".[17][18] Chinese state media said in late February 2016 that Gui was being held for "illegal business operations". He is alleged to have knowingly distributed books not approved by China's press and publication authority since October 2014.[19] Gui remains in detention in China one year after his disappearance.[20]

Biography

Early life

Born in Ningbo in 1964, Gui graduated from Peking University with a bachelor's degree in History in 1985.[1][21] Gui served as editor to the People's Education Press until 1988, when he departed for Sweden, and enrolled in a doctorate program at the University of Gothenburg.[21] After the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, he obtained Swedish residency, and later naturalised as a citizen of Sweden, upon which he renounced his Chinese citizenship. According to his daughter, he was attracted to beauty of his adopted country and the freedom he felt living there.[22] Upon obtaining his PhD in 1996,[21] Gui's wife is also a naturalised Swedish citizen. The couple's daughter was born in 1994.[21]

Gui returned to China in 2000 and started a company in Ningbo, offering environmental engineering services.[23] In 2003 he was known to be working for a German affiliate of Nordpool Consulting. Gui was allegedly involved in a drink-driving incident in Ningbo in December 2003 in which a 20-year-old girl died.[21][13] The Ningbo Municipal Intermediate People's Court ruled the following August that Gui Minhai had committed a crime, for which Gui received a two-year suspended jail term.[7][13][24] He then departed for Germany.[21]

Publishing career

Beginning in 2006, he set up several publishing companies focused on Chinese politics.[21] He joined the Chinese chapter of PEN International, through which he became acquainted with professionals in Hong Kong International PEN.[25] In 2013, Gui, Lee Bo, and Lui Bo set up Mighty Current Media[21] (also referred to as Sage Communications)[4] – a Hong Kong company specialising in publishing and distributing books on political gossip about leaders in China.[21] Gui and Lee Bo both hold 34% of the company's shares (Lee Bo's shares are in the name of his wife, Sophie Choi), and Lui Bo holds the remaining 32%.[26] In 2014, the company acquired Causeway Bay Books, an upstairs bookstore in the bustling part of Hong Kong.[25]

Under the name "Ah Hai", Gui authored around 200 books during his ten-year career.[4][5] The subjects of these books included Bo Xilai, and Zhou Yongkang, who are former members of the Politburo of the Communist Party of China, and Chinese President Xi Jinping.[4] The books have been described in the Western media as "thinly-sourced, tabloid-style political books ... which are outlawed in mainland China".[4] Gui's colleague, Lee Bo, acknowledged that Gui's books contained a lot of conjecture and gossip rather than actual fact, and described Gui as a businessman whose publishing was motivated by profit rather than ideology.[4]

Due to the fact that works critical of the leadership of the Chinese regime are considered sensitive, Gui always kept his work projects secret; he kept his movements to himself and his telephone calls were re-routed through foreign countries.[4] He went a long period without entering the PRC – he did not attend his father when the latter was ill, and did not return to China for his funeral, either.[27] Media sources reported that Gui had published approximately half of the popular books written on Bo Xilai. When Bo was caught in the political fallout from the Wang Lijun incident in 2013, Gui reaped a financial benefit of HK$10 million from the surge in sales.[21] Gui's publishing financed his property acquisitions in Hong Kong and Germany, including a seaside retreat in Pattaya, Thailand.[21][4]

Disappearance

Last heard from on 15 October according to his colleagues,[3] Gui disappeared from his apartment in Pattaya, Thailand on 17 October, apparently taken away by an unknown man.[28] He was the second bookseller associated with Causeway Bay Books to apparently vanish without trace: Lui Bo had last been seen near his home in Shenzhen on 14 October 2015; three others would also disappear in the weeks that followed.[29] The three latter were reported missing in November.[30] Lee Bo had been in fact informing the media of the disappearances of his other four colleagues when he himself vanished from Hong Kong on 30 December.[31] Lee's disappearance, due to the improbability that Lee had gone to Shenzhen while his mainland travel permit was left at home, crystallised a great deal of anxiety about the pattern of bookshop disappearances and of the possibility of cross-border renditions.[31] Lee Bo's disappearance prompted Hong Kong Chief Executive CY Leung to hold a press conference on 4 January 2016 in which he stated that it would be "unacceptable" and a breach of the Basic Law if mainland Chinese law officials were operating in Hong Kong.[32][33]

Two weeks after Gui's disappearance, four men came to search his apartment – ostensibly for his computer – but left without it.[34][35][28] A manager from the estate where Gui lived attempted to contact Gui on the number of the person who called her last regarding Gui. A taxi driver answered, saying that four men had left the telephone in the taxi, and that they had wanted to go to Poipet, a border town in Cambodia.[4] Gui was last heard from on 6 November when he called his wife to tell her that he was safe but was unwilling to reveal his whereabouts.[36] The Thai authorities have no record of Gui leaving the country.[3] Gui's family contacted the Swedish embassy, and the Swedish police filed a report through Interpol. The Guardian observed that the Thai government had done little to advance the case, noting that the military junta was becoming increasingly accommodating to Chinese demands.[4]

Confirmation of detention

Xinhua News Agency published an article on 17 January 2016 stating that an individual by the name of Gui Minhai had been detained relating to a fatal traffic accident in December 2003 in which a school girl died.[7][24] Xinhua alleged that Gui Minhai (桂敏海), with a different but identical-sounding middle character with respect to Gui Minhai the publisher, had fled abroad under the guise of a tourist in November 2004 using a borrowed identity card following the court case; his stated age was 46 years in 2005 – a discrepancy of five years compared with the details in Gui's Swedish passport. The two discrepancies created doubts that there may have been a case of mistaken identity.[37][13][11] Xinhua claimed that Gui gave himself up to public security officials in October 2015.[10][12]

A video confession which was released at the same time and broadcast on China Central Television confirmed his identity. A tearful Gui said that his return to mainland China and his surrender were "my personal choice and had nothing to do with anyone else. I should shoulder my responsibility and I don’t want any individual or institutions to interfere, or viciously hype up my return". Gui also said, “Although I have Swedish citizenship, I truly feel that I am still Chinese — my roots are in China. So I hope Sweden can respect my personal choice, respect my rights and privacy of my personal choice and allow me to resolve my own problems”. Criminal investigations on other charges were said to be in progress.[10][11][12] It was only on 19 January, when fellow Swedish citizen Peter Dahlin, cofounder of an NGO providing legal training for local lawyers in China, appeared on television, confessing to having violated Chinese law and "caused harm to the Chinese government [and] hurt the feelings of the Chinese people" that it came to international attention that Gui had also confessed on television. Dahlin was deported.[8] Reporters Without Borders condemned China's forced confessions, and urged the EU to sanction CCTV and Xinhua for "knowingly peddling lies and statements presumably obtained under duress".[38] Lee Bo's letter to his wife on 17 January said that he had voluntarily gone to the mainland to assist Chinese law enforcement in an investigation that involved Gui. He denounced Gui as "a morally unacceptable person" who had got him into trouble with the authorities.[39][11]

Gui's video confession broadcast on China Central Television on 17 January 2016

Gui Minhai's confession was received with incredulity, and many of the facts surrounding his disappearance from Thailand, including the release of the video three months after his disappearance, were called into question.[13][14] The president of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong, Jasper Tsang, said: "the China Central Television (CCTV) report [and broadcast of Gui Minghau's confession] did not seem to be able to calm the public. As the case drags on, there will be more speculation".[15] Human Rights Watch was quoted as saying: "Given that Gui has been held nearly three months incommunicado, in a secret location, and without a lawyer, his confession on state-controlled TV lacks credibility."[16] The Washington Post said: "The narrative seems messy and incoherent, blending possible fact with what seems like outright fiction. It feels illogical, absurd even."[17][18] The Guardian drew a connection to Operation Fox Hunt, a Chinese government campaign launched by Xi Jinping in 2014 to repatriate corrupt officials or opponents of the regime who had fled abroad, and which may also have been responsible for the abduction of the other missing booksellers.[4] In mid-June 2016, his family had not yet received official confirmation that he was under detention, according to Gui's daughter.[40]

Reaction to detention

Bei Ling, a personal friend of Gui and president of Independent Chinese PEN, said that Gui had not given himself up voluntarily but had in fact been abducted.[41] He confirmed that there had indeed been a drink-driving case involving Gui in which a young woman was killed but that the accident and his disappearance were unrelated.[39][11] Bei asserted that there was no official record of Gui Minhai's departure from Thailand, and that international law had been violated by Gui's kidnapping.[41] He speculated that the abductors had returned to Gui's apartment to retrieve his passport, and that Gui may have been sent to China from Cambodia on a plane loaded with Chinese deportees.[4] Gui's daughter Angela had been notified of her father's disappearance in an email from Lee Bo dated 10 November in which Lee said he feared Gui had been taken to China "for political reasons".[3] Angela dismissed the assertion that her father had returned to the mainland voluntarily.[10][15]

Sweden has repeatedly requested transparency from China, and summoned the Thai ambassador for information in December.[10] After the appearance of the video confession, the Swedish foreign ministry reported that a Swedish envoy was finally allowed to visit Gui.[42][43] In January 2016, Swedish foreign minister Margot Wallström condemned the forced confessions of Dahlin and Gui (who are both Swedish citizens) on Chinese television, terming them "unacceptable". The Chinese government has said that Gui was first and foremost a Chinese subject, and the Swedish government seems to have quietly accepted this position. The Swedish diplomatic effort has been through consular channels and has been low profile.[44] In late February 2016, state media appeared to clarify the charges against Gui, saying that Gui was being held for "illegal business operations". He is alleged to have knowingly distributed books not approved by China's press and publication authority – according to the charges, some 4,000 such books had been sent by post disguised as different books to 380 buyers in 28 cities in mainland China since October 2014.[19] Also in early February, the European Parliament issued a statement asking for the Gui, Lee Bo, and their three colleagues at Causeway Bay Books to be released immediately. In his report on Hong Kong for the second half of 2015, British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond expressed concern about the Causeway Bay Books disappearances, and said in particular that the abduction of Gui's colleague Lee Bo, a British citizen, from Hong Kong was "a serious breach of the Sino-British Joint Declaration on Hong Kong and undermines the principle of one country, two systems".[9]

Gui's detention was discussed at the US Congressional Executive Committee on China in May.[44] In September, Angela spoke before the United Nations Human Rights Council, and also made an emotional plea on behalf of her father on Swedish television, an appearance which prompted another public statement by Wallström on the detention. The Swedish Government, which said that they had been involved in "quiet diplomacy" with the Chinese regime, secured a second audience with Gui after 11 months of detention.[44]

A year after Gui's disappearance, there is a general consensus among commentators that the five booksellers were abducted by Chinese authorities.[20] As of October 2016, Gui has spent a year in detention, while the other four men were released in early March 2016.[45][46] Another colleague, Lam Wing-kee gave a detailed and highly-mediatised interview about his abduction and his months in detention by mainland law enforcement in Ningbo and subsequently Shaoguan. Their other colleagues have remained low profile and refused comment.[47]

Bibliography

References

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  2. "桂友:30年前已用「桂敏海」 近年被指錯字". Ming Pao (in Chinese). 19 January 2016. Archived from the original on 12 November 2016.
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  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Holmes, Oliver (8 December 2015). "Gui Minhai: the strange disappearance of a publisher who riled China's elite". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 12 November 2016.
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  39. 1 2 "TV confession dubious: Activists". Straits Times. 19 January 2016.
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  41. 1 2 "香港铜锣湾书店案:瑞典寻求中国澄清桂民海下落" [Causeway Bay Books case: Sweden seeks clarification on whereabouts of Gui Minhai] (in Chinese). BBC. 18 January 2016.
  42. "Missing Hong Kong booksellers paraded on Chinese TV". BBC News. 29 February 2016.
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  45. "Missing bookseller Lui Por back in Hong Kong, government says". The Guardian. Agence France-Presse. 4 March 2016.
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  47. Ngo, Jennifer (17 June 2016). "Full transcript of Lam Wing-kee's opening statement at his Hong Kong press conference". South China Morning Post.

External links

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