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Publishers take on China at Hong Kong book fair
By Aaron TAM, Dennis CHONG
Hong Kong (AFP) July 20, 2016


China warns independence candidates in Hong Kong election
Hong Kong (AFP) July 20, 2016 - China warned Wednesday against Hong Kong pro-independence parties running in the city's upcoming elections as the movement gains traction among some young campaigners.

It comes days after leaders of two pro-independence groups nominated candidates for the September parliamentary vote.

Concern is growing that the Chinese government is tightening its grip on the semi-autonomous city, spurring an emerging "localist" movement seeking more autonomy or even a full split from China.

Beijing and authorities in Hong Kong have said the pro-independence movement is against the city's mini-constitution and that campaigning for a breakaway could result in unspecified "action according to the law".

The director of China's representative office in Hong Kong, Zhang Xiaoming, warned Wednesday against parties transforming the election into a promotion of Hong Kong independence.

"If Hong Kong independence groups are tolerated in entering gloriously into the legislative body of Hong Kong, is this in accordance with "one country, two systems?" Zhang asked in a televised news conference, referring to the city's semi-autonomous status.

"Which direction would this set Hong Kong society down?...This isn't just only a legal issue, it's a major matter of principle, a matter of the bottom line," he said.

The "one country, two systems" deal is enshrined in an agreement when Britain handed Hong Kong back to China in 1997, guaranteeing its freedoms and way of life for 50 years.

But there are fears those freedoms are being eroded by Beijing interference.

Zhang's comments come after at least 13 pro-democracy candidates, including some who are campaigning for independence, refused to sign a form reiterating the city is an "inalienable" part of China in order to be nominated -- a new electoral requirement that has been slammed as political censorship.

Critics say the Hong Kong leadership is merely a puppet of Beijing, particularly since mass rallies in 2014 failed to win political reform.

Negative sentiment has been exacerbated by the disappearance last year of five Hong Kong booksellers from a firm that published gossipy books about leading Chinese politicians. All resurfaced on the mainland.

One of the men, who skipped bail and is now in Hong Kong, told how he was blindfolded, detained and interrogated over alleged involvement in bringing banned books into the mainland.

Pro-independence activists clashed with police in some of the city's worst violence in decades in February, but have since maintained a fairly low profile.

Hong Kong's feisty publishing industry vowed to take on China by selling books critical of Beijing, despite the disappearances of five city booksellers, as a major annual book fair began Wednesday.

The booksellers, who went missing last year and resurfaced in the mainland, worked for a Hong Kong publishing house known for gossipy titles about China's political leaders.

One of the men is still detained and another, who skipped bail and is now in Hong Kong, has revealed how he was blindfolded and interrogated for months during his detention.

Some mainstream bookstores in Hong Kong removed works likely to offend mainland authorities from their shelves in the wake of the disappearances.

And while independent shop owners are still willing to stock the books, some have told AFP that salacious or critical titles about Beijing politics have dwindled as publishers have been scared off.

But on the first day of the book fair Wednesday, there was determination to keep fighting.

"As a publishing house, I personally think I should not worry... You lose if you start to worry," said Jimmy Pang, head of Hong Kong publisher Subculture.

Pang said he would not stop printing political books out of fear, but described the pressure on the Hong Kong industry as "white terror".

"If a book is suddenly banned, say after some mainland officials say it is, the whole line of production can get into trouble, from its writer, publisher, to the distributor and even readers. It can happen two or three years after the book is printed," Pang said.

One of Subculture's political authors, Lam Hong-ching, is promoting a book on self-determination for semi-autonomous Hong Kong, reflecting a growing desire among young campaigners for more distance from Beijing.

"People are worried. Some writers don't even write anymore. Some publishers don't dare to print," Lam told AFP.

"But it's even more important to write these books now, otherwise residents are not properly informed."

Lam says he fears for his own safety and has not renewed the permit held by Hong Kong residents which allows them to visit the mainland.

- Forbidden fruit -

The fair has always been a source of books that would be banned on the mainland, with many readers crossing the border to browse titles off limits at home.

Despite the pressures, there are still a number of booths this year selling works ranging from steamy tomes about the sex lives of Chinese leaders to literature advocating political rights in the face of Beijing.

One mainland visitor, who gave his name as Shu, said he had taken a holiday from his home in Shanghai so that he could read books unavailable in China.

"I want to read them here, but I won't bring them home. I'm worried to do so," the 46-year-old marketing consultant told AFP.

Shu said he wanted more liberal ideas to be heard and would be disappointed if Hong Kong stopped producing the books.

Bookshop owner Paul Tang says the demand from mainland readers is undented.

But he adds that the industry itself has undoubtedly been hit by the missing bookseller saga, with the supply to his shop of gossipy titles about Beijing politicians having been halved.

One publisher he knew emigrated in the wake of the disappearances and cut all contacts with his authors, says Tang, whose shop is not far from the Causeway Bay bookstore where the five booksellers sold their titles.

"(Some publishers) just raised their hands and said they would give up," he said.


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