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Letters | What Chinese leaders can learn from the Swedes about playing it cool in politics
- The greater the official fuss over gossipy books, the more people are likely to believe that there is truth to the fiction
- Cut the fuss, let Gui Minhai go, and no one will believe his books
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Why you can trust SCMP
I love Hong Kong, the atmosphere, the people. Hong Kong is the perfect mix between old and new. When visiting, it feels like travelling 100 years back in time; but in other ways Hong Kong is more developed and technologically advanced than back home in Sweden. It has been three years since I was in Hong Kong, but I still feel the pull of the city.
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Since I love Hong Kong so much, I have also noticed the cultural differences that influence our perception of politics, which see political statements and political acts interpreted differently. As I write, demonstrations against the extradition bill show no signs of ending. From a Swedish perspective, the clearest example of the importance of an extradition bill is the case of Gui Minhai. Since Chinese-born Gui is a Swedish citizen, I thought I would tell you a bit about how our cultural differences make us interpret the case differently.
In 2012, a Swedish movie called Call Girl was made. The movie implied that Olof Palme – the best prime minister we ever had – had been involved with child prostitutes. There was a public outcry about whether the allegation was true or if the filmmakers had slandered a murdered man who could not defend himself. However, the majority of Swedes – including myself – saw Call Girl in sort of the same light as we see the Da Vinci Code. As fiction.
Of course, the majority of the Swedish population would be furious if Palme had been involved with prostitutes, but most of us thought the movie was nonsense. However, if the Swedish government had stopped the movie from being released, then Swedish people like me would most certainly think that Palme had been involved. With the “theory” out there in the open, we could reject it as nonsense.
Hence, when China wants to send out the message that nobody talks bad about the Chinese government, we do not hear that. Instead, we hear that those stories about love, murder and revenge among Chinese leaders that are said to be fiction, are not fiction, they must be true. Otherwise, the Chinese government would not send agents to Thailand to kidnap a Swedish national, just to try to stop these books from being published.
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