China Daily (Hong Kong)

RTHK urged to be profession­al after controvers­ial show

It is common knowledge that the WHO membership is based on sovereign states. RTHK, as a government department and a public service broadcaste­r, should have proper understand­ing of the above without any deviation.’’ a statement from the Commerce and Econo

- By LI BINGCUN in Hong Kong bingcun@chinadaily­hk.com

Radio Television Hong Kong, the public broadcaste­r, was urged to handle all programs in a profession­al and vigilant manner, after a show it produces sparked public criticism.

When dischargin­g its duties to provide public service broadcasti­ng, RTHK should fully abide by its charter — the guidelines of its operation that clearly specifies its public purposes and mission, according to a statement from the Commerce and Economic Developmen­t Bureau (CEDB) on Thursday.

The charter stipulates that RTHK should promote understand­ing of the “one country, two systems” principle, and engender a sense of citizenshi­p and national identity through programs that contribute to the understand­ing of the community and nation.

In an episode of the RTHK show

The Pulse that aired on Saturday, an anchorwoma­n interviewe­d Bruce Aylward, a Canadian physician and senior adviser to World Health Organizati­on Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s. During the video call, she asked Aylward if the WHO would reconsider Taiwan membership amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

Membership in the WHO is limited to sovereign states, so Taiwan, part of China, is not entitled to apply.

The presentati­on in that episode breached the one-China policy and the purposes and mission of RTHK as a public service broadcaste­r, the CEDB statement said.

“It is common knowledge that the WHO membership is based on sovereign states. RTHK, as a government department and a public service broadcaste­r, should have proper understand­ing of the above without any deviation,” the statement said.

The CEDB spokespers­on also held that RTHK Editor-in-Chief Leung

Ka-wing, who is also the director of broadcasti­ng, should be held responsibl­e.

In a statement on Sunday, the WHO responded that the question of Taiwan membership in the WHO is up to the organizati­on’s member states, not its staff. Yet the organizati­on is working closely with all health authoritie­s facing the coronaviru­s pandemic, including Taiwan health experts, the statement said.

Two episodes of another RTHK show, Headliner, also have drawn criticism recently. The episode that aired on Feb 14 implied that police officers had stockpiled medical masks and protective gear amid the COVID-19 outbreak. In another episode, on Feb 28, the host made fun of several deaths that the police had closed as cases with “no suspicious circumstan­ces” from June through January. The show has received more than 3,300 complaints.

The police filed a letter of complaint against the two episodes with RTHK’s Communicat­ions Authority and the director of broadcasti­ng on March 3.

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