Gui Minhai

January 9, 2024
Writer

Quick Facts

Gui Minhai
Full Name Gui Minhai
Occupation Writer
Date Of Birth May 5, 1964(1964-05-05)
Age 60
Birthplace Ningbo
Country China
Horoscope Taurus

Gui Minhai Biography

Name Gui Minhai
Birthday May 5
Birth Year 1964
Place Of Birth Ningbo
Birth Country China
Birth Sign Taurus
Children(s) Angela Gui

Gui Minhai is one of the most popular and richest Writer who was born on May 5, 1964 in Ningbo, China. Gui was born to Ningbo around 1964. Gui was a graduate of Peking University with an undergraduate degree in the field of history in the year 1985. Gui worked as the editor of the People’s Education Press until 1988 after which he moved to Sweden and began an advanced doctoral program in Gothenburg University. University of Gothenburg. Following his involvement in the Tiananmen Massacre in Tiananmen Square, he was granted Swedish residency and then became a naturalised resident of Sweden and abdicated and renounced his Chinese citizenship. Gui earned his PhD in the year 1996. Gui’s wife is naturalized Swedish citizen. Their child was born on the 14th of April in. Gui came back in Ningbo, China in 1999 and set up a subsidiary for the Swedish firm known as in Chinese in Chinese as Tangyou (Tang You ) which offers products for air purification. Gui was chairman and CEO.

A few weeks after Gui’s disappearance four men arrived to the apartment to search it in search of his computer , but left with nothing. The manager of the estate which Gui lived tried to reach Gui through the phone number of the person who contacted her last time about Gui. The taxi driver returned the call with a statement there were four people who had left the phone in the taxi and that they were planning to travel to Poipet which is a town bordering Cambodia. Gui was last seen on November 6, when he contacted his wife to inform his wife that he was in safe hands but was unable to divulge his location. The Thai authorities do not have any evidence of Gui having left the country. Gui’s family reached out to the Swedish Embassy, along with the Swedish police made a formal report through Interpol. The Guardian noted it was the Thai government had done nothing to help the investigation in the past, and that the military regime was more and more accepting of Chinese demands.

Gui’s confession was received with incredulity, and many of the facts surrounding his disappearance from Thailand, including the release of the video three months after his disappearance, were called into question. The president of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong, Jasper Tsang, said: “the China Central Television (CCTV) report [and broadcast of Gui Minghau’s confession] did not seem to be able to calm the public. As the case drags on, there will be more speculation”. Human Rights Watch was quoted as saying: “Given that Gui has been held nearly three months incommunicado, in a secret location, and without a lawyer, his confession on state-controlled TV lacks credibility”. The Washington Post said: “The narrative seems messy and incoherent, blending possible fact with what seems like outright fiction. It feels illogical, absurd even”. Amnesty International’s China researcher cast doubt on the narrative, asking: “Why would four other employees of a company need to go missing in order to assist with a regular criminal case? How could other missing or otherwise investigated colleagues of Gui Minhai have any connection to the case?” The Guardian drew a connection to Operation Fox Hunt, a Chinese government campaign launched by Xi Jinping in 2014 to repatriate corrupt officials or opponents of the regime who had fled abroad, and which may also have been responsible for the abduction of the other missing booksellers. By mid-June 2016, Gui’s family had not yet received official confirmation that he was under detention, according to Gui’s daughter.

His colleagues last heard from Gui Minhai on 15 October 2015. Gui was captured on closed circuit TV leaving his apartment in Pattaya, Thailand on 17 October 2015, apparently taken away by an unknown man. He was the second bookseller associated with Causeway Bay Books to apparently vanish without trace: Lui Bo had last been seen near his home in Shenzhen on 14 October 2015; three others would also disappear in the weeks that followed. The three were reported missing in November. Lee Bo (sometimes, Paul Lee, also, Lee Po) had been informing the media of the disappearances of his other four colleagues when he himself vanished from Hong Kong on 30 December. Lee’s disappearance, due to the improbability that Lee had gone to Shenzhen while his mainland travel permit was left at home, crystallised a great deal of anxiety about the pattern of bookshop disappearances and of the possibility of cross-border renditions. Lee Bo’s disappearance prompted Hong Kong Chief executive CY Leung to hold a press conference on 4 January 2016 in which he stated that it would be “unacceptable” and a breach of the Basic Law if mainland Chinese law officials were operating in Hong Kong.

A video confession that was released simultaneously and aired through China Central Television confirmed his identity. In the video, which lasted 10 minutes an emotional Gui expressed his sorrow over a murder conviction that was a fugitive from decade prior. He stated that the returning to mainland China as well as his surrender was “my personal choice and had nothing to do with anyone else. I should shoulder my responsibility and I don’t want any individual or institutions to interfere, or viciously hype up my return”. Gui added, “Although I have Swedish citizenship, I truly feel that I am still Chinese – my roots are in China. So I hope Sweden can respect my personal choice, respect my rights and privacy of my personal choice and allow me to resolve my own problems”. Investigations into the criminality of other crimes were reported to be underway. It was not until 19 January that the fellow Swedish citizens Peter Dahlin, cofounder of an NGO that provides legal education for lawyers from local areas in China appeared on TV admitting to having violated Chinese laws in a manner that “caused harm to the Chinese government [and] hurt the feelings of the Chinese people” It was later brought to the attention of the world media that Gui was also confessed to on TV; Dahlin was then removed from the country. Reporters Without Borders condemned China’s forced confessions and called on the EU to punish CCTV as well as Xinhua because they were “knowingly peddling lies and statements presumably obtained under duress”. Lee Bo’s letter addressed to his wife on January 17th stated that he was voluntarily going to China to assist Chinese law enforcement officials in an investigation involving Gui. Lee Bo blasted Gui in the letter as “a morally unacceptable person” who got him in troubles with the authorities.

Gui Minhai Net Worth

Net Worth $5 Million
Source Of Income Writer
House Living in own house.

Gui Minhai is one of the richest Writer from China. According to our analysis, Wikipedia, Forbes & Business Insider, Gui Minhai 's net worth $5 Million. (Last Update: December 11, 2023)

Gui Minhai (Chinese: Gui Min Hai or Gui Min Hai; pinyin: Gui Minhai or Gui Minhai; born 5 May 1964) Also called Michael Gui, is a Chinese-born Swedish book publisher and author. Gui is the author of numerous books related to Chinese politics as well as Chinese political figures. Gui has written more than 200 books over the course of his 10-year tenure under the pen name Ah Hai (A Hai ). He is also one of the three investors in Causeway Bay Books in Hong Kong.

As the political environment in China improved, Gui moved to Hong Kong. In 2006, in Hong Kong Gui set up a number of publishing firms that were focussed on Chinese mainland political issues. He was a member of an organization called the Chinese section of PEN International, and through this he met with the experts from Hong Kong International PEN. The year 2013 saw Gui, Lee Bo and Lui Bo formed Mighty Current Media (also referred to as Sage Communications), a Hong Kong company specialising in publishing and publishing books on gossip about the political people in China. Gui as well as Lee Bo both hold 34 percent of the stake (Lee Bo’s shares belong held in his name, as is the wife of Sophie Choi), and Lui Bo owns the remaining 32 percent. It was in the year 2014 that they purchased Causeway Bay Books, an upstairs bookstore located in the bustling area of Hong Kong.

Because works critical of the leadership of the Chinese regime are considered sensitive, Gui always kept his work projects secret; he kept his movements to himself and his telephone calls were re-routed through foreign countries. He went a long period without entering China; he did not visit his father when the latter was ill, and did not return to China for his father’s funeral. Media sources reported that Gui had published about half of the popular books written on Bo Xilai. When Bo was caught in the political fallout from the Wang Lijun incident in 2013, Gui reaped a financial benefit of HK$10 million from the surge in book sales. Gui’s publishing financed his property acquisitions in Hong Kong and Germany, including a seaside retreat in Pattaya, Thailand.

Height, Weight & Body Measurements

Gui Minhai height Not available right now. Gui weight Not Known & body measurements will update soon.

Who is Gui Minhai Dating?

According to our records, Gui Minhai is possibily single & has not been previously engaged. As of December 1, 2023, Gui Minhai’s is not dating anyone.

Relationships Record : We have no records of past relationships for Gui Minhai. You may help us to build the dating records for Gui Minhai!

Xinhua News Agency published an article on 17 January 2016 stating that an individual by the name of Gui Minhai had been detained relating to a fatal traffic accident in December 2003 in which a schoolgirl died. It is likely he was held under Residential Surveillance at a Designated Location. Xinhua alleged that Gui Minhai (桂敏海), with a different but identical-sounding middle character with respect to Gui Minhai the publisher, had fled abroad under the guise of a tourist in November 2004 using a borrowed identity card following the court case; his stated age was 46 years in 2005 – a discrepancy of five years compared with the details in Gui’s Swedish passport. The two discrepancies created doubts that there may have been a case of mistaken identity. Xinhua claimed that Gui gave himself up to public security officials in October 2015. Contrary to Xinhua’s claims, news reports from 2004 about the court proceedings from the traffic accident did not suggest Gui intended to abscond, instead he expressed a willingness to assume “full responsibility” in the form of economic compensation. Gui was given a probationary sentence at that time.

Facts & Trivia

Gui Ranked on the list of most popular Writer. Also ranked in the elit list of famous people born in China. Gui Minhai celebrates birthday on May 5 of every year.

Although Gui was a naturalised Swedish citizen who had renewed his passport sometime between late 2017 and mid-2018, the Ningbo Intermediate People’s Court where Gui was tried said that Gui had applied to restore his Chinese citizenship in 2018 – a measure observers have described as an unprecedented move to cut off consular access. Peter Dahlin, fellow Swedish who had been made to confess on Chinese television before he was deported, commented: “the only ‘state secrets’ that Gui may have is knowledge about how Chinese agents kidnapped him in Thailand, and about the torture he had endured after being returned to China”. Chinese officials have insisted someone like Gui is considered “a Chinese national first and foremost.” Legal scholars and many overseas Chinese who have acquired foreign citizenship have expressed their great concern at the apparently selective application of Chinese nationality law that bans dual citizenship. Jerome A. Cohen and Donald C. Clarke, both respected legal scholars on China, said the use against a former Chinese citizen was in breach of Article 36 of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, and the move could foretell its use on any non-ethnic Chinese critic if they so please.

What did GUI Minhai do?

Gui was detained for charges related to “illegal business operations”, according to Chinese officials. However, it was announced on 25 February 2020 that he was tried for “ illegally providing intelligence overseas “, and sentenced Gui to 10 years’ imprisonment.

Where is GUI Minhai now?

A Chinese court has sentenced Hong Kong bookseller Gui Minhai to 10 years in jail for “illegally providing intelligence overseas”. Mr Gui, who holds Swedish citizenship, has been in and out of Chinese detention since 2015, when he went missing during a holiday in Thailand.

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