Mr Kulshrestha was among a group of 20 foreign tourists who were detained in northern China for suspected links to “a terror group” according to reports by Britain’s Foreign Office and a South African charity. Earlier, Indian officials had confirmed that the embassy in Beijing had sought access to the Indian national under arrest.
China had earlier agreed to release 11 of the tourists, but the rest were held without charge at a detention center in Inner Mongolia, the South African charity, Gift of the Givers Foundation, had said.
Chinese authorities said some of those arrested had been watching propaganda videos from a banned group in their hotel room, the charity added in its statement.
The group was on a 47-day tour of the country when they were detained at an airport in the Inner Mongolian city of Erdos. Their tour operator realised something had gone “horribly wrong” on Sunday, two days later, the foundation said, when he hadn’t heard from them.
“Consular staff have visited the group to provide assistance and we are liaising with Chinese authorities,” a British Foreign Office spokesman had told news agency Reuters.
Chinese law enforcement authorities could not be immediately reached for comment.
“These individuals have no terror links, no criminal record in their country,” said Gift of the Givers, which has negotiated hostage releases.
Several of those detained are relatives of Shameel Joosub, chief executive of telecom company Vodacom Group Ltd., the charity added.
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