Det är nu tio år sedan Gui Minhai kidnappades. Den 17 oktober är årsdagen av gripandet, och i samband med detta organiserar Reportrar utan gränser en internationell kampanj för att öka pressen på Kina att frige honom.
Journalistförbundet ansluter sig och skriver under följande gemensamma uttalande tillsammans med ett stort antal organisationer ur civilsamhället världen över. Uppropet försvarar det fria ordet och kräver att Kina omedelbart släpper Gui Minhai, att den svenska regeringen ökar pressen på Kina samt att EU-kommissionen agerar för en frigivning.
Uppropet kräver också att thailändska myndigheter ska utreda omständigheterna kring kidnappningen av en svensk medborgare i Thailand och hans överföring till Kina.
Uppropet är ett av flera initiativ och arrangemang till stöd för Gui Minhai som genomförs under veckan där Journalistförbundet medverkar. Läs mer om de olika initiativ och evenemang som äger rum här.
Uttalandet i sin helhet och samtliga undertecknare kan läsas här nedan.
Joint Statement from Civil Society Groups
on the Chinese Government’s Arbitrary Detention
of Swedish publisher Gui Minhai
We, the undersigned press freedom, journalists’, human rights, international organisations, strongly condemn the Chinese government's ongoing arbitrary detention of Swedish publisher and writer Gui Minhai on the 10th anniversary of his kidnapping.
On 17 October 2015, Gui Minhai, a founder of Hong Kong publishing house, was kidnapped by Chinese authorities in Thailand. In February 2020, he was sentenced to ten years in prison by the Ningbo Intermediate People’s Court on the alleged charge of “illegally providing intelligence to foreign countries,” which is regularly used to silence journalists and human rights defenders.
Details of his imprisonment have been kept hidden for the past five years. Gui Minhai has been denied access to his family and to consular support from the Swedish Embassy. His daughter has not been informed of his whereabouts since the date of the verdict. His current place of detention remains unknown, despite repeated requests by his daughter. The Government of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) has failed to clarify his whereabouts, further raising concerns about his physical and mental condition.
Since Mr. Gui's conviction, Sweden has demanded the release of its citizen. However, Chinese authorities insisted that Mr. Gui had chosen not to appeal the sentence and that he had his Chinese citizenship reinstated at his own request. Under Swedish law, citizenship can only be renounced following an examination and a formal decision by the Swedish Migration Agency. The PRC’s coerced restoration of Mr. Gui’s Chinese nationality constitutes a violation of international law as well as Sweden's sovereign rights. At the time of his arrest, Gui Minhai held only Swedish citizenship. In the past, Chinese officials have stated that foreign passports do not protect individuals who were born in the PRC, an interpretation that blatantly violates the Vienna Convention.
Mr. Gui was re-arrested while on his way to the Swedish Embassy in Beijing to be examined by a Swedish physician. He suffers from neurological symptoms that were not present before he was first taken into custody, after being rendered from Thailand to the PRC under unclear circumstances.
Throughout his detention, Gui Minhai has twice been subjected to televised forced confessions, further raising concerns about the legality of the proceedings against him. Chinese authorities are notorious for this practice, which undermines human dignity and violates the presumption of innocence that is supposedly guaranteed by the Chinese constitution.
The Gui Minhai case is emblematic of the Chinese regime's campaign of repression against critical voices, as part of an escalating crackdown on the right to information since Chinese leader Xi Jinping came to power in 2012. China ranks 178th out of 180 in the 2025 Reporters without Borders (RSF)’s World Press Freedom Index, and is the world’s leading jailer of journalists and writers, according to data from RSF, and PEN America. It ranks ‘in crisis’ in ARTICLE 19’s Global Expression Report.
Mr. Gui’s case is not an isolated one. Chinese authorities have systematically invoked “national security” as a pretext to prosecute human rights defenders, writers, publishers, and journalists—extending their reach beyond the PRC’s borders by launching police operations in neighboring countries—while the governments of third countries have bluntly allowed the repression of dissidents within their territories.
Domestically, restrictions on journalists and others who speak out against government abuses have tightened drastically, in direct contradiction of the right to freedom of expression and press guaranteed under Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and Article 35 of the Chinese Constitution.
Despite persistent calls from the international community for the immediate release of Gui Minhai, the Chinese government continues to ignore the urgency of the matter. This includes a November 2024 Communication from nine Special Procedures of the United Nations Human Rights Council concerning a recurring pattern of repression, including incommunicado detention and enforced disappearances, aimed at restricting the freedom of expression, which called for information on the fate and whereabouts of Gui Minhai, among others. His arbitrary detention makes a mockery of China’s international human rights obligations. Gui Minhai has committed no internationally recognized offence, yet has been subjected to harsh punishment solely for exercising his right to freedom of expression.
We urge the Chinese government to:
- Immediately and unconditionally release Gui Minhai;
- Guarantee Gui Minhai’s safety, psychological well-being, provide adequate and independent medical care, and share regular updates on his whereabouts and current place of detention;
- Allow him unhindered access to contact with his daughter, Angela Gui, and other family members, including through video calls;
- End the systemic crackdown on civil society, including harassment, arbitrary detention, enforced disappearances, and the targeting of publishers, journalists, writers, and human rights defenders.
We urge the Swedish government to:
- Publicly and in bilateral meetings—including high-level meetings—call for the immediate release of Gui Minhai, in compliance with the Constitution of the People’s Republic of China, which prohibits unlawful detention and guarantees personal dignity;
- Demand transparency regarding his whereabouts and ensure full access to consular support and regular consular visits;
- Clearly communicate to Chinese authorities that continued unlawful and arbitrary detention of Gui Minhai will have serious political consequences for bilateral relations, and condition any economic collaboration on his release.
We urge the European External Action Service (EEAS), the European Commission, and the Member States to:
- Urge the immediate and unconditional release of Gui Minhai, demand transparency on his whereabouts, and communicate that opposite actions will have serious political consequences for bilateral relations;
- Advocate for the release of arbitrarily detained journalists, writers, and human rights defenders, including using high-level meetings to publicly call for the release of specific individuals by name;
- Closely monitor the human rights situation in China, including through prison visits, trial monitoring, and regular public statements;
- Condition international law enforcement interactions and rule of law cooperation with the Chinese government on the government’s dropping all charges and quashing all convictions against those wrongfully detained for peacefully exercising or advocating human rights, including press freedom and right to information;
- Reminding China of its international obligations to respect press freedom and the right to information, as guaranteed by Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which China has signed, and Article 35 of the Chinese Constitution;
- Establish safe refuge alert systems to provide a direct and easy-to-use communication with the police or immigration officers for Chinese publishers, writers, journalists and human rights defenders who are under the threat of transnational repression.
We urge Thai authorities to:
- Clarify the circumstances surrounding the unlawful rendition of Gui Minhai from Thailand to the People’s Republic of China;
- Immediately cease all actions that facilitate the repression and persecution of human rights defenders, journalists, and advocates of press freedom by the PRC within Thailand;
- End the deportation of Chinese human rights defenders and journalists to China, in accordance with the principle of non-refoulement, to which Thailand is bound.
Signatories:
- Reporters Without Borders (RSF)
- Safeguard Defenders
- European Values Center for Security Policy Taiwan Office
- ACAT-France
- PEN International
- The Committee for Freedom in Hong Kong Foundation
- Hong Kong Watch
- GreatFire
- Media Diversity Institute
- New Bloom
- PEN America
- Grupo de Apoio ao Tibete-Portugal
- Swedish PEN
- Santa Barbara Friends of Tibet
- Association of Taiwan Journalists (ATJ)
- The Tibet Support Committee, Denmark
- Center for Uyghur Studies
- Campaign for Uyghurs
- The Hong Kong Scots
- Scottish Hongkongers
- Hong Kong Committee in Norway
- Bay Area Friends of Tibet
- Independent Chinese PEN Center (ICPC)
- Aus-Hong Kong Connex Inc.
- Hong Kong Media Overseas
- Svensk Bokhandel
- Tibet Support Group Ireland
- The Rights Practice
- Index on Censorship
- China Aid Association (ChinaAid)
- Solidarité Chine
- Global Alliance for TIbet & Persecuted Minorities
- The Swedish Publishers Association
- Northern California Hong Kong Club
- The Swedish Union of Journalists
- The European Federation of Journalists (EFJ)
- The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ)
- Uyghur Human Rights Project (UHRP)
- Humanitarian China
- Human Rights in China
- The Swedish Tibet Committee
- Taiwan Association for Human Rights
- Hongkongers in Britain (HKB)
- The Daphne Caruana Galizia Foundation
- Comité de Apoyo al Tíbet (CAT), Spain
- Tibet Initiative Deutschland e. V.
- CamboJA
- Globe International Center
- The Nest Center for Journalism Innovation and Development
- Legal Initiatives for Vietnam
- Victoria Hongkongers Association (Australia)
- Human Rights Foundation
- Chinese Human Rights Defenders (CHRD)
- US Hongkongers Club
- International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), within the framework of the Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders
- World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT), within the framework of the Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders
- Hongkonger in Deutschland e. V.
- International Service for Human Rights (ISHR)
- New Zealand Alliance for Victims of the Chinese Communist Regime
- Freedom House
- Students for a Free Tibet
- Hong Kong Outlanders in Taiwan
- Asia Freedom Institute
- Fortify Rights
- Lady Liberty Hong Kong
- Peace Catalyst International
- Georgetown Center for Asian Law
- Tibet Solidarity
- Reading UK Stands with Hong Kong
- Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation
- China Rights in Action (CRA)
- China Against the Death Penalty (CADP)
- The Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development (FORUM-ASIA)
- Covenants Watch
- Hong Kong Democracy Council (HKDC)
- Amnesty International Australia
- Gerakan Media Merdeka (GERAMM)
- National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP)
- ARTICLE 19
- Swedish Media Publishers’ Association
- Overseas Press Club of Cambodia (OPCC)
- AlterMidya
- Prachatai
- Cambodian Center for Independent Media (CCIM)
- Taiwan Economic Democracy Union
- World Uyghur Congress
- PEN Nederland
- Uyghur PEN Centre