Bookstore owner to ask Pelosi to help Hong Kongers at Taipei meeting

Reuters

By Sarah Wu

TAIPEI – A staunch defender of human rights and long-time China critic, U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi is set to meet rights activists in Taiwan on Wednesday, a move certain to ramp up already fraught tensions between Beijing and Washington.

Among those she will meet are a Hong Kong bookseller who fled to the self-ruled island in 2019, a former Tiananmen demonstrator and a Taiwanese activist recently released by China, people familiar with the matter told Reuters.


China has condemned Pelosi’s visit to the democratic island that Beijing claims as its own, responding with increased military activity in surrounding waters and by summoning the U.S. ambassador in Beijing.

Bookstore owner Lam Wing-kee hopes Pelosi can help Hong Kongers who are afraid to return to their city amid fears they will be persecuted under a sweeping national security law.

“I want to discuss with her whether there is a possibility for the U.S. government to help those who cannot return to Hong Kong and who may not be able to obtain identity cards in Taiwan, to help them to go to the United States,” Lam told Reuters.

Lam was detained in China for eight months in 2015 over books critical of China’s leaders and their private lives.

An invitation Lam said he received from the American Institute in Taiwan, the United States de facto embassy, lists the National Human Rights Museum in Xindian, New Taipei City, as the location for a meeting. Pelosi is not specifically mentioned in the invitation.

AIT said it expected to invite seven guests to the meeting and requested that each prepare three-minute opening remarks, according to the invitation, which was reviewed by Reuters.

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AIT declined to comment on the meeting.

Less than two hours by flight from Hong Kong, Taiwan is a popular destination for scores of democracy activists from the former British colony who took part in anti-government demonstrations in 2019 and later fled Beijing’s tightening grip over the city.

The flow of Hong Kong people to Taiwan increased significantly amid fears they could be arrested under the national security law Beijing imposed on Hong Kong in 2020 after the sometimes violent protests.

Pelosi, 82, has drawn Beijing’s ire over her criticism of the 1989 crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in and around Beijing’s Tiananmen Square and authorities’ treatment of China’s Uyghur Muslim ethic group.

Just two years after Chinese troops opened fire on Tiananmen demonstrators, Pelosi visited the square and unfurled a banner commemorating those who died. Uniformed police pursued Pelosi and her team as they left the square.

Beijing sees official visits by senior foreign officials to the self-governing island as a sign of tacit support for the island’s pro-independence camp.

Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen rejects Chinese sovereignty claims and says Taiwan is already an independent country called the Republic of China, its official name.

(Reporting by Sarah Wu in Taipei; Editing by Anne Marie Roantree and Lincoln Feast)

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