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Wednesday, August 21, 2019

China says it has detained a UK consulate employee

Simon Cheng, a 28-year-old who works as a trade and investment officer for the British Consulate General Hong Kong, has been put in administrative detention for 15 days, China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Geng Shuang said Wednesday.
"The person is not a British citizen. He is a Hong Kong citizen, so he is a Chinese citizen and this is a purely Chinese internal affair," Geng said.
Cheng has been detained for violating China's Security Administration Punishment Law, which covers a range of offenses deemed too minor to be crimes. The law is often used as a preliminary measure that allows police to investigate a suspect before deciding whether to prosecute.
According to Cheng's girlfriend Annie Li, Cheng traveled from Hong Kong to the border city of Shenzhen on the morning of August 8 in his capacity as a trade officer. Cheng works for the consulate's Scottish Development International, which promotes trade and investment between Scotland and other countries, and he is often required to travel to mainland China for work.
A photo of Simon Cheng, posted on his Facebook on June 13, 2018.
Cheng messaged Li on the night of August 8, just before he was about to go through customs into Hong Kong, Li told CNN. She has not heard from him since then.
"Simon has signed a contract with the British government," she told CNN. "If he hadn't been given that assignment, he wouldn't have needed to go to Shenzhen. Britain must take the responsibility in rescuing Simon."
The British Consulate-General in Hong Kong on Tuesday addressed local media reports detailing Cheng's disappearance. "We are extremely concerned by reports that a member of our team has been detained returning to Hong Kong from Shenzhen," a spokesperson said in an email.
"We are providing support to his family and seeking further information from authorities in Guangdong province and Hong Kong," the spokesperson added.
The British Embassy in Beijing put out an identical statement.
On August 8, Cheng messaged Li to say he was on the high-speed train, and later messaged to say he was about to pass through the border, according to screenshots seen by CNN. If Cheng was on the high-speed train between Shenzhen and Hong Kong, the only border is in the West Kowloon station. In parts of the station, Chinese laws apply despite it being on Hong Kong soil which operates under a separate legal system from the mainland.
Li said Cheng is a Hong Kong permanent resident who was traveling on his mainland travel permit. She says he also has a British National Overseas (BNO) passport, a special document for people from Hong Kong, a former British colony, which entitles them to consular assistance from the UK, although it is not equivalent to UK citizenship.
China does not recognize dual nationality for any Chinese national, meaning it does not recognize BNO passports.
Cheng's disappearance comes as Hong Kong approaches its 12th weekend of mass pro-democracy protests. Travelers told CNN that security at the border between Hong Kong and China had increased since the mass protests began in June.
A Hong Kong man who recently crossed back to Hong Kong from China told CNN that border police appeared to be picking people at random to be subjected to extra searches. The man -- who asked not to be named -- said police scrolled through the photos on his phone.
In a statement posted online Wednesday morning, Cheng's family reiterated that Cheng had been in Shenzhen on a "business trip."
On August 9, the family contacted Hong Kong Police and the Immigration Department, and were told they could travel to mainland China themselves to report the missing case to authorities there, the statement said. On August 10, the Immigration Department told the family Cheng had been "administratively detained," but that they had no information on why, where, and for how long he would be detained.
The family said they had not received any notice of administrative detention, which is supposed to be sent out within 24 hours of a person's detention. "We simply have never received any documentation confirming that Simon has been formally detained by the authorities," the statement said.
"We feel very helpless, and are worried sick about Simon," the family said. "We hope that Simon can return to Hong Kong as soon as possible."
In the statement, the family said that a lawyer representing them had gone to three detention centers in Shenzhen, but was unable to find Cheng. Police stations in Shenzhen and Guangzhou, and the Guangzhou Railway Public Security Bureau also had no information on his whereabouts.
Authorities in both Hong Kong and mainland China -- which operates under a separate legal system from Hong Kong -- have released few details of the case. On Tuesday, Hong Kong Police Senior Superintendent Kong Wing-cheung confirmed that they had received a missing person report on August 9. The Hong Kong Immigration Department also confirmed it had received a request for assistance from Cheng's family and was providing them with advice and assistance.
CNN has reached out to the Guangdong Provincial Public Security Bureau and the Shenzhen City Public Secruity Bureau.

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