How HK handed over a dissident
A Chinese US resident arrives in Hong Kong from Macau on a Malaysian passport under an assumed name, is told there is a 'problem', then, after two days' detention, is put in a car by immigration officers, whisked across the border and handed over to mainland authorities.
Weeks pass with no word of his whereabouts, until his partner and the mother of their 18-month-old daughter receives phone calls and an e-mail from a former Shenzhen prison inmate saying he is in a jail there. Prison staff deny it, then four months later a former inmate of another Shenzhen jail says he has seen him there - under another name. Still officials deny the man is there.
Sounds like the opening chapter of a thriller or the first scene of a film noir? It's not.
It's the story of Zhou Yongjun , a dissident leader of the 1989 Tiananmen student uprising, according to his familiy and to a statement he gave a lawyer while imprisoned in his native Sichuan .
In the eyes of Zhou's Hong Kong lawyer, it is the biggest challenge to the 'one country, two systems' formula since the handover.
To a leading immigration consultant in the city it is unlawful, inexplicable and without precedent.