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Police: 3 Hong Kong booksellers held in China to get bail Police: 3 Hong Kong booksellers held in China to get bail
(35 minutes later)
HONG KONG — Hong Kong police say three missing booksellers will be freed on bail as mainland Chinese authorities continue their investigation. HONG KONG — Three of five missing Hong Kong booksellers will be freed on bail soon while mainland Chinese authorities continue their investigation, police say, in the latest wrinkle to a case that’s sparked concern in the specially run Chinese region.
The announcement late Wednesday is the latest wrinkle in a case that’s stoked fears Beijing is reneging on its promise to give the special Chinese region a high degree of control over its own affairs. Hong Kong police said in a brief notice late Wednesday that said they were informed by the public security department in neighboring Guangdong province that Lui Por, Cheung Chi-ping and Lam Wing-kee will be “released on bail pending investigation in the coming few days.”
Police said they were informed by the public security department in neighboring Guangdong province that Lui Por, Cheung Chi-ping and Lam Wing-kee will be “released on bail pending investigation in the coming few days.” The disappearances of the three, along with two other men, Gui Minhai and Lee Bo, have stoked fears Beijing is eroding the semiautonomous Chinese city’s rule of law and civil liberties, such as freedom of the press.
The three vanished in October and then reappeared Sunday along with a fourth man, Gui Minhai, to make televised confessions about illegally selling books to mainland Chinese buyers. The publishing company that the five are associated with specialized in books on sensitive Chinese political topics that proved popular with visitors from the mainland, where they were prohibited from sale.
A fifth man, Lee Bo, was interviewed by the channel on Monday. The police statement did not say whether they would be allowed to return to Hong Kong or would have to remain in mainland China.
Lui, Cheung and Lam vanished in October and then reappeared Sunday on Hong Kong-based pro-Beijing news channel Phoenix TV, where they confessed to helping Gui send thousands of books illegally by mail to mainland Chinese buyers.
Lee appeared in a separate interview with the news channel on Monday in which he claimed he wasn’t abducted, as many suspected, but had sneaked illegally in the mainland to help authorities with an investigation.
Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.