Dissident Hong Kong bookseller Lam Wing-kee dies aged 70

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Dissident Hong Kong bookseller Lam Wing-kee dies aged 70​


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Jaroslav Lukiv
Reuters Bookseller Lam Wing-kee marches during a protest in Hong Kong to demand authorities scrap a proposed extradition bill with China. Photo: March 2019.
Reuters
Bookseller Lam Wing-kee marches during a protest in Hong Kong to demand authorities scrap a proposed extradition bill with China. Photo: March 2019.
Hong Kong bookseller Lam Wing-kee, who defied China and fled to Taiwan, has died aged 70.

Lam passed away at Mackay Memorial Hospital late in Taipei on Thursday after suffering from lung cancer, regional media said.

He was one of several booksellers detained in 2015 after selling material critical of the political elite on China's mainland.

He fled to Taiwan - which is seen by Beijing as a renegade province that must be reunited - in 2019 for fear he would be sent back to China under Hong Kong's proposed extradition bill.

Taiwan's authorities said at the time that the reopening of Lam's Causeway Bay Books bookshop was a symbol of democracy and freedom on the island.

Lam was taken to Mackay Memorial Hospital in Taipei on Tuesday and later fell into a coma, reported the South China Morning Post citing local media. He died late on Thursday.

In a post on Facebook, Taiwan President Lai Ching-te wrote that he was "deeply saddened" about Lam's death, sending condolences to his family and friends.



Lam's life "bore witness to the value of freedom of expression, and to the fear and suffering inflicted by authoritarian repression.

"He chose not to remain silent. Instead, he reopened Causeway Bay Books in Taiwan, turning it into a place where friends from Hong Kong could gather, speak out and support one another," Taiwan's leader added.

Last year, Lam told BBC Witness History: "Everyone has their own values. You can't go against your values, nor can you betray others.

"If you believe something is right, you should continue to stick to it. It's not like you're harming anyone. If everyone could do that, this would of course be a better place," Lam said, in what was his last BBC interview.

In 2015, he was arrested during a visit to mainland China and held for more than 400 days.

He was among several bookshop owners and staff who disappeared and were later found to have been detained by Chinese authorities, as part of a crackdown on bookshops in the former British colony that sold publications critical of China's leaders.

A confession broadcast on Chinese television was, he said, staged and acted out to a script.

His case fuelled fears of China's increasing encroachment on Hong Kong's freedoms, fears which led to the months-long mass protests in 2019 in Hong Kong - China's special administrative region since 1997.

 
Not this again.

His was one of the five who went to mainland to look for his partner in the bookshop Gui Minhai. Not knowing that Gui was taken to mainland because of a fatal hit and run accident.

Western media milk this as best as they could, but newspaper archive of mainland newspaper publish the accident when it occured and subsequent court case.

Gui did not pay the victim family in accordance to the sentence, change his passport name and flee to Hong Kong. And was arrested by Chinese authorithy decade later.

His partners in the bookstore made a fuss when Gui lost contact and make it an international incident by accusing China of censorship and false arrest.

But the newspaper archive proof the accident happened because China do not have a time machine to go back and plant the story. But no way the partners and the western media is going to admit that they make a mistake, and probably profited by milking the increase coverage that western media were all too happy to provide.

Yes China would always lose in this public propaganda game because western media has the channel.

But I think truth is also important, karma has a funny way of showing itself if media engage in false hood all too easily and too often.
 
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