China rejects Sweden's 'groundless' accusations over detained publisher by Staff Writers Beijing (AFP) March 9, 2018 China on Friday rejected "groundless" accusations by Sweden over detained book publisher Gui Minhai after Stockholm demanded medical access to the Swedish citizen. Chinese-born Gui was arrested on a train to Beijing in January while travelling with two Swedish diplomats -- the second time he has vanished into Chinese custody in murky circumstances. Sweden has called for his release and on Thursday Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom denounced Beijing's refusal to allow a Swedish doctor to visit the Hong Kong-based bookseller. "China's action is unacceptable and violates previous promises that our citizens would have the opportunity to consult a Swedish doctor," said Wallstrom. In response, China said Gui was in a "good physical state" and that authorities had already arranged a check-up for Gui. "He expressed that at present he doesn't wish to see a Swedish doctor," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told reporters. "We've already expressed his wishes to the Swedish side, and hope that the Swedish side can respect them. As for the groundless accusations from the Swedish side, the Chinese side will not accept that," he added. Gui was seized while travelling to Beijing from the eastern city of Ningbo on the way to see a Swedish specialist over fears he had the neurological disease ALS. Gui -- one of five Hong Kong-based booksellers known for publishing gossipy titles about Chinese political leaders -- first disappeared in 2015 and resurfaced in mainland China. No public explanation for this arrest has been given by Chinese authorities. He was on holiday in Thailand at the time of his first arrest and eventually surfaced at an undisclosed location in China, confessing to involvement in a fatal traffic accident and smuggling illegal books into the mainland. Chinese authorities declared they had released him in October 2017 but his daughter Angela Gui, 23, told AFP that he was under "loose house arrest" in Ningbo. The Chinese Embassy in Sweden said last month that Gui is now being held in a detention centre in the city.
Spoiler alert: Xi unlikely to lose term limit vote Beijing (AFP) March 9, 2018 Public pressure, heated debate and a nail-biting vote: Don't expect any of that when Chinese legislators cast historic ballots on lifting presidential term limits on Sunday. The rubber-stamp National People's Congress has never voted against anything the Communist Party has imposed on the legislature in its half-century of existence. President Xi Jinping is thus all but certain to secure a path toward ruling the world's second largest economy for life, but any legislator who may be secretly unha ... read more
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