The Telegram (St. John's)

Hong Kong’s free media fears being silenced by China’s security law

- JAMES POMFRET GREG TORODE REUTERS

HONG KONG — When a team of producers at Radio Television Hong Kong (RTHK) heard on May 19 that the publicly funded broadcaste­r planned to axe one of its most popular weekly shows, they rushed to the building next door to confront the station’s head.

A group of about 20 producers and other employees from RTHK’S TV and radio operations barged into a conference room where Leung Ka-wing, director of broadcasti­ng, was meeting with top executives.

Some staff demanded to know why the satirical and current affairs television show “Headliner” — which had drawn official complaints after poking fun at the Hong Kong police in an episode in February — was being cancelled, and whether the move was prompted by pressure from authoritie­s.

The impromptu meeting lasted about 90 minutes, during which several staffers cried and raised their voices, according to three people present. Leung said he took the decision to cancel the show in order to “protect RTHK” and its staff, according to the three people.

As conversati­ons continued inside the conference room, RTHK announced it was suspending production of the Chinese-language show, which had been running since 1989, at the end of the current season. RTHK apologized to anyone offended by the station’s output but did not give a reason for the suspension.

Leung, 67, who made his name in broadcasti­ng during the Tiananmen Square crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in Beijing in 1989, declined to answer Reuters’ questions about the meeting. He denied making the comment about protecting RTHK, according to RTHK spokeswoma­n Amen Ng. Other executives in the meeting that Reuters could identify did not reply to requests for comment.

Hong Kong’s government did not comment on whether it had pressured Leung to cancel the show.

RTHK, founded in 1928 and sometimes compared to the British Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n, is the only independen­t, publicly funded media outlet on Chinese soil. It is guaranteed editorial independen­ce by its charter.

Hong Kong reached boiling point last summer as millions of pro-democracy protesters took to the streets and some of them clashed violently with police, posing one of the biggest challenges to China’s leader Xi Jinping since he came to power in 2012.

In response to the protests, China said last month it would introduce national security legislatio­n in Hong Kong to prohibit secession, subversion and external interferen­ce. More than a dozen people working at RTHK and other media organizati­ons told Reuters they fear that legislatio­n could be used to silence or shut down independen­t media in the territory.

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