Swedish Publisher Detained in China to Publish Poems Smuggled Out of Jail

Swedish Publisher Detained in China to Publish Poems Smuggled Out of Jail
Members of the pro-democracy Civic Party carry a portrait of Gui Minhai (L) and Lee Bo during a protest outside the Chinese Liaison Office in Hong Kong on Jan. 19, 2016. Bobby Yip/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

STOCKHOLM—A dissident bookseller who has been detained in China off and on since 2015 is to release a collection of his poems that have been smuggled out of jail, a Swedish publishing house said on Nov. 6.

Chinese-born Gui Minhai, a Swedish citizen based in Hong Kong who has published books critical of China’s leaders, was abducted in Thailand in 2015 and later appeared in custody in mainland China.

The book, called “I Draw a Door on the Wall With My Finger,” will be released in May next year on Gui’s 56th birthday.

“We were contacted by his daughter Angela and she wondered if we wanted to publish the poems, which we very much wanted,” said Martin Kaunitz of Kaunitz & Olsson. “He had them smuggled out to Angela and he wrote the poems during his first stay in prison.”

Kaunitz said the book was a good way of shining a light on Chinese authorities and to keep Gui in the public’s mind.

“It is clear that the attention of the outside world is a protection for these people,” he said.

Gui became a Swedish citizen after studying there in the 1980s. After the abduction, he was released in October 2017, but his whereabouts were unclear until January 2018 when he was seized by Chinese agents on a Beijing-bound train in the presence of Swedish diplomats.

His detention has been a source of tension between Stockholm and Beijing, and Sweden replaced its ambassador to China, Anna Lindstedt, earlier this year after her “incorrect” handling of unauthorized meetings intended to help free Gui.

Gui’s original abduction—along with four others in the Hong Kong book trade—fueled worries about interference from Beijing, despite guarantees of wide-ranging freedoms for the former British colony that returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

The four others have since returned to Hong Kong. The United States and European Union have urged Gui’s release.

By Johan Ahlander