In a surprise interview sure to infuriate Beijing, Lam Wing-kee late Thursday vowed to break bail, refusing to return to the mainland, and further defied Chinese authorities by blowing the lid on how he was detained on a visit to China and interrogated for months with no access to a lawyer or his family.
Lam Wing-kee is one of five booksellers who published salacious titles about leading Chinese politicians and disappeared at the end of last year in a case that drew international condemnation and heightened fears Beijing was tightening its grip on Hong Kong.
Lam returned to Hong Kong Tuesday on bail and was due to go back Thursday but instead decided to remain and tell his story.
Around 40 protesters from pro-democracy party Demosisto gathered outside China's liaison office in Hong Kong Friday shouting "Defend the freedoms of Hong Kongers!"
"We hope the world can put pressure on the government to release all of them (the booksellers)," said activist Nathan Law who was leading the rally along with high-profile campaigner Joshua Wong.
"Lam is the role model for Hong Kong people -- facing the suppression of the communist regime," Wong said.
Demosisto is a newly formed party calling for self-determination for semi-autonomous Hong Kong, part of a growing movement of young campaigners seeking more autonomy from Beijing amid fears of disappearing freedoms.
Other political groups are due to protest outside the liaison office throughout the day.
Rights group Amnesty International slammed China's treatment of the booksellers, saying Lam had confirmed what many had suspected.
"It seems clear he, and most likely the others, were arbitrarily detained, ill-treated and forced to confess," said Mabel Au, Director of Amnesty International Hong Kong.
Another two booksellers, Cheung Chi-ping and Lui Por returned to Hong Kong in March on bail, but are reported to have quickly gone back to the mainland.
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