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Vincent Yu/AP

Hong Kong booksellers remain missing as mysterious letter emerges

The men are feared detained by Chinese authorities.

RIGHTS GROUPS HAVE questioned the validity of a letter, published by Taiwan’s Central News Agency, purportedly written by one of five missing Hong Kong booksellers, feared detained by Chinese authorities.

Today Britan confirmed one of the men, 65-year-old Lee Bo, is a UK citizen saying it is “deeply concerned” over the disappearances

The letter, purported to be from Lee was said to have been faxed to a colleague, saying he was well and had reached the mainland using his own means on an “urgent matter”.

He said he was “assisting an investigation” but did not elaborate.

Lee’s wife has previously said he called her from a number in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen after he went missing.

Critical of the Chinese government

The case has sparked fury from lawmakers and activists in semi-autonomous Hong Kong, adding to growing unease that freedoms in the city are being eroded.

All five missing men worked for the same Hong Kong-based publishing house Mighty Current, known for books critical of the Chinese government.

British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond, visiting Beijing, told reporters: “We have urgently inquired with both Hong Kong and mainland authorities.”

Hammond added that if Lee were charged with any offences, he should be tried in Hong Kong.

‘One country, two systems’

Foreign minister Wang Yi did not reply directly when asked whether China had detained the booksellers, but said policy towards Hong Kong remained “unchanged”.

“We will continue to uphold the principles of ‘one country, two systems’, Hong Kong people administering Hong Kong, and a high degree of autonomy,” he said.

He was also asked whether China would recognise Lee’s British passport.

“Based on the basic law of Hong Kong and China’s nationality law, this person in question is first and foremost a Chinese citizen,” he said.

China does not recognise dual nationality of its own citizens.

An earlier statement from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office confirmed Lee was a British citizen, saying it was “deeply concerned by reports” about the disappearances.

The FCO urged the Hong Kong government to “honour its commitment” to press freedom.

It added that it hoped Chinese authorities would ensure the environment for media and publishers in Hong Kong supported “full and frank reporting”.

‘I feel unsafe’ 

Hong Kong was handed back to Beijing by Britain in 1997 and enjoys freedoms unseen on the mainland. Chinese law enforcers have no right to operate in the city.

Police confirmed Tuesday Lee’s wife, Sophie Choi, had retracted a report on her husband’s disappearance, a move Amnesty said smacked of “intimidation”.

“I believe he did it voluntarily, so I cancelled the report,” Choi told reporters.

A friend of Lee who volunteers at the book store and did not want to be identified said: “His wife is on the brink of collapse.”

He added he too was now afraid.

“I feel unsafe — I don’t know whether the next one will be me,” he told reporters.

Amnesty said it was common for Chinese authorities to put pressure on those close to detainees.

“One wonders whether the same sort of intimidation is being used against associates and friends (of the publishers),” said Amnesty International’s China researcher William Nee.

- © AFP 2016.

Read: Concern after five booksellers critical of Chinese government disappear>

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