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China demands apology from Sweden over treatment of 3 tourists

17-9-2018 < RT 52 571 words
 

What began as a dispute over check-in times between three Chinese tourists and a Swedish hotel has somehow escalated into an international incident, with Beijing demanding an apology for what it says was a human rights violation.


China has issued a safety warning for its nationals in Sweden after the three tourists were “brutally abused” by local police on September 2. On Monday, Beijing urged Stockholm to take their concerns seriously and respond to the complaint immediately


“We again urge Sweden to take China’s concerns seriously, and to take practical measures to protect the security and legitimate interests of Chinese tourists,”said China’s foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang.





The Chinese family arrived to the Stockholm hotel after midnight on the day in question - several hours before their scheduled arrival. After being told they could not check in yet, they asked if they could wait in the lobby. The hotel staff ordered them to leave when they allegedly started to make verbal threats, before calling the police to forcibly remove them.



READ MORE: 22 cars burned in Sweden as country rocked by rising crime


Dramatic video footage showing the family being carried out by police went viral. The son can heard repeatedly yelling “This is killing”, while another clip shows the trio crying loudly on the ground outside, with the mother yelling in Chinese: “Save me”.


On Saturday, the Chinese embassy in Sweden said that China’s ministry of foreign affairs had reached out to the Swedish government “stressing that what the police had done severely endangered the life and violated the basic human rights of the Chinese citizens.”





The hotel said the family had arrived the day before their booking and they had done “everything we could do for this guest.”


“But at the same time we can not accept that our staff are exposed to threats and that other guests will suffer from a threatening situation,” the manager said to the newspaper Aftonbladet.


Swedish police apparently had the time and resources to eject a disgruntled family from a hotel while ignoring serious threats to safety of its citizens, though. The current socialist government is under increasing pressure to tackle the surge in crime which has seen up to 22 cars burned or damaged across the southern region of the country.


Sweden has not yet responded to China’s request for an update on the investigation.


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