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Missing HK bookseller considered suicide 'many times' in China Missing HK bookseller considered suicide 'many times' in China
(35 minutes later)
A Hong Kong bookseller who went missing last year says he considered taking his own life many times while in custody in China.A Hong Kong bookseller who went missing last year says he considered taking his own life many times while in custody in China.
Lam Wing Kee, 61, was the manager of a well-known bookstore that sold titles critical of the Chinese leadership.Lam Wing Kee, 61, was the manager of a well-known bookstore that sold titles critical of the Chinese leadership.
Mr Lam was one of five booksellers who were imprisoned for months in cases that made international headlines.Mr Lam was one of five booksellers who were imprisoned for months in cases that made international headlines.
He believes they were taken by an elite Chinese law enforcement group which targeted authors and booksellers.He believes they were taken by an elite Chinese law enforcement group which targeted authors and booksellers.
One of the men, Gui Minhai, is still in custody.One of the men, Gui Minhai, is still in custody.
Mr Lam says he contemplated suicide during his imprisonment but could not make any physical attempts because of the structure and design of his cell. Mr Lam, who was released on Tuesday, was the owner the Causeway Bay Bookstore before it was purchased by Mr Gui last year.
"I did consider it, from January to sometime around the Chinese new year," he says. Mr Lam told the BBC that he was accused after his arrest last October of trying to overthrow the Chinese government by mailing books to the mainland.
"I was looking for a place up there to hang myself... but there wasn't." "I was told I could be put in prison for 20-30 years or even life imprisonment," he said.
He was not physically abused, he says, but endured months of solitary confinement, interrogations and psychological torture. He said that he had contemplated suicide in January and February but could not make any attempts because of the design of his cell.
"I was looking for a place up there to hang myself... but there wasn't," he said. He was not physically abused, he says, but endured months of solitary confinement, interrogations and psychological torture.
HK bookseller's 'toothbrush suicide watch'HK bookseller's 'toothbrush suicide watch'
Mr Lam, who was released on Tuesday, told the BBC he thinks the booksellers were held in two different locations, including a secure, secret facility in eastern China. Mr Lam was arrested while visiting the Chinese city of Shenzhen. He says he was taken, blindfolded, to the eastern city of Ningbo, where he was held until March.
He says he was abducted while visiting the Chinese city of Shenzhen last October. In March, when three of his colleagues were released and returned to Hong Kong, Mr Lam was transferred to a room in the city of Shaoguan in Guangdong province, where he said he enjoyed more freedom.
Mr Lam was the owner the Causeway Bay Bookstore before it was purchased by Mr Gui last year.
After being arrested, he says he was taken, blindfolded, to the eastern city of Ningbo, where he was held until March.
In March, when three of his colleagues were released and returned to Hong Kong, Mr Lam was transferred to a room in the city of Shaoguan in Guangdong province, where he enjoyed more freedom.
China and the booksellersChina and the booksellers
1. Lui Bo, general manager. Went missing: Shenzhen, 15 October 2015 Returned: March 20161. Lui Bo, general manager. Went missing: Shenzhen, 15 October 2015 Returned: March 2016
2. Cheung Jiping, business manager. Went missing: Dongguan, 15 October Returned: March 20162. Cheung Jiping, business manager. Went missing: Dongguan, 15 October Returned: March 2016
3. Gui Minhai, co-owner. Went missing: Thailand, 17 October Still missing3. Gui Minhai, co-owner. Went missing: Thailand, 17 October Still missing
4. Lam Wing Kee, manager. Went missing: Shenzhen, 23 October Returned: June 20164. Lam Wing Kee, manager. Went missing: Shenzhen, 23 October Returned: June 2016
5. Lee Bo, shareholder. Went missing: 30 December - he says from the mainland, Mr Lam says it was from Hong Kong Returned: March 20165. Lee Bo, shareholder. Went missing: 30 December - he says from the mainland, Mr Lam says it was from Hong Kong Returned: March 2016
Hong Kong's missing booksellers and 'banned' Xi Jinping bookHong Kong's missing booksellers and 'banned' Xi Jinping book
Booksellers are innocent, says authorBooksellers are innocent, says author
China confirms Hong Kong bookseller investigationChina confirms Hong Kong bookseller investigation
Mr Lam says he was released this week on the condition that he would retrieve a hard disk filled with the names of people, mainly mainland Chinese, who had bought books from the Mighty Current publisher.Mr Lam says he was released this week on the condition that he would retrieve a hard disk filled with the names of people, mainly mainland Chinese, who had bought books from the Mighty Current publisher.
He says he has no intention of handing over the data, and has no regrets about speaking freely about what happened to him.He says he has no intention of handing over the data, and has no regrets about speaking freely about what happened to him.
Special TeamSpecial Team
Who exactly was behind the operation to detain the booksellers, one of whom disappeared from Thailand and another from Hong Kong?Who exactly was behind the operation to detain the booksellers, one of whom disappeared from Thailand and another from Hong Kong?
For months, there has been debate on whether the campaign was ordered by the highest levels of the Chinese leadership, or, perhaps, by lower levels of officialdom keen to impress the government in Beijing.For months, there has been debate on whether the campaign was ordered by the highest levels of the Chinese leadership, or, perhaps, by lower levels of officialdom keen to impress the government in Beijing.
Some believe the crackdown was prompted by the imminent publication of a book about the private life of President Xi Jinping.Some believe the crackdown was prompted by the imminent publication of a book about the private life of President Xi Jinping.
Mr Lam says he does not know for sure.Mr Lam says he does not know for sure.
But, he says, he was held by officials from an ad-hoc cross-agency law-enforcement team that can be convened only by the senior leadership in Beijing.But, he says, he was held by officials from an ad-hoc cross-agency law-enforcement team that can be convened only by the senior leadership in Beijing.
This elite group has roots stretching all the way back to the Cultural Revolution, when its officers were responsible for investigating Communist Party luminaries such as Liu Shaoqi.This elite group has roots stretching all the way back to the Cultural Revolution, when its officers were responsible for investigating Communist Party luminaries such as Liu Shaoqi.
More recently, it was believed to be responsible for investigating former security tsar Zhou Yongkang and the former Communist Party chief in Chongqing, Bo Xilai.More recently, it was believed to be responsible for investigating former security tsar Zhou Yongkang and the former Communist Party chief in Chongqing, Bo Xilai.