Australia asks for answers on dissident missing in China by Staff Writers Sydney (AFP) Jan 23, 2019 Australia is investigating reports a Chinese-Australian dissident is missing and may have been detained in his native country, officials said Wednesday. Yang Hengjun -- a novelist, former Chinese diplomat and democracy activist -- went missing shortly after he returned to the southern city of Guangzhou last week, friends said. When asked about Yang's case, the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said it was "seeking information about an Australian citizen who has been reported missing in China". "Owing to our privacy obligations we will not provide further comment," a spokesman told AFP. The Australian government is believed to be in contact with Yang's friends and family, as well as Chinese authorities. The Sydney Morning Herald reported that Yang had returned to China with his wife and son on January 18, but never made a planned internal flight to Shanghai. His disappearance prompted fears that he may be the latest victim of an increasingly broad dragnet by Chinese security services. Australia recently expressed concern about China's detention of two Canadians in apparent retaliation for the arrest in Canada of a senior Huawei executive. Yang's friend and journalist John Garnaut described him as "brilliant" and "a courageous and committed democrat". "This will reverberate globally if authorities do not quickly find an off-ramp," he warned. Yang had worked in the ministry of foreign affairs in Hainan province, but later left for Hong Kong in 1992 and the US in 1997 where he worked for the Atlantic Council think tank. He later took up Australian citizenship -- although Beijing does not recognise dual nationality -- and wrote a series of spy novels and a popular Chinese-language blog. Once described as China's "most influential political blogger", Yang went missing once before in 2011, describing his disappearance as a "misunderstanding" when he resurfaced days later.
Above the concrete canopy: Hong Kong from the sky Hong Kong (AFP) Jan 21, 2019 A giant container ship sailing under a suspension bridge; Chinese cemeteries as densely packed as the housing blocks their occupants once lived in; lush rows of paddy fields - aerial shots offer a whole new perspective on Hong Kong. Internationally it may be best known as a high-octane finance hub filled with skyscrapers, but there is much more to the city - from bustling ports and picture perfect beaches to rolling hills and verdant forests. AFP photographer Dale de la Rey spent three months ... read more
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