Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Ms. Gui, thank you for taking the time to tell your heartbreaking story about Hong Kong. It sent chills up my spine.
My late father was a Hong Konger who went to high school there, grew up there and was born there. He began his studies at university in mainland southern China, and it was just over 70 years ago, as the communists began their march south in 1948, that he fled on one of the last trains back to Hong Kong.
Like your father, he never held Chinese citizenship but rather a British Hong Kong passport. He told us when we were kids that he'd never go back to mainland China for fear of being abducted, so your story sent chills up my spine, and I thank you for telling that.
Good afternoon, Mr. Law. Thank you for taking the time to appear. It's good to see you again, and I'm glad to see you're safe and well.
My first question is for Ms. Gui. Has the Swedish government done anything with respect to Thai authorities arresting your father, and have they done anything with respect to the People's Republic of China?