Beijing seeks loyalty from ethnic Chinese settled abroad
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AFTER the disappearance last December of Hong Kong bookseller Lee Bo, Britain's foreign secretary Philip Hammond asked Beijing for information on his whereabouts, pointing out that the 65-year-old was a British national. China's foreign minister, Wang Yi, responded that Mr Lee was "first and foremost a Chinese".
Subsequently, Mr Lee appeared on television and said that he wanted to give up his British citizenship.
Similarly, Gui Minhai, Mr Lee's colleague in the bookselling business, a Swedish national who mysteriously disappeared while in Thailand, popped up on Chinese television and asked the Swedish government not to help him - certainly an odd thing to say for someone who was clearly in deep trouble with the Chinese government.
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