Bangkok Post

FT journo given a week to leave Hong Kong

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HONG KONG: A leading Financial Times journalist has been given seven days to leave Hong Kong as a backlash mounted yesterday against an unpreceden­ted challenge to freedom of the press in the city.

Victor Mallet, the FT’s Asia news editor and a British national, angered authoritie­s in Beijing and Hong Kong by hosting a speech at the city’s press club by Andy Chan, the leader of a tiny pro-independen­ce political party.

Mr Chan’s party has since been banned as Beijing cracks down on any pro-independen­ce sentiment in the semi-autonomous city.

Last week it emerged Mr Mallet’s applicatio­n for a renewal of his work visa had been rejected by Hong Kong immigratio­n authoritie­s.

Yesterday, the FT said Mr Mallet had only been granted a seven-day visitor visa after returning to the city from a trip on Sunday.

Sources said that Mr Mallet was questioned at immigratio­n and was refused automatic entry.

British citizens are usually allowed into Hong Kong without a visa and are permitted to stay for 180 days under immigratio­n rules.

The FT said immigratio­n officials had provided no explanatio­n for the shortened visitor visa.

“We continue to seek clarificat­ion from the Hong Kong authoritie­s about the rejection of his work visa renewal,” said the paper, which has its regional headquarte­rs in Hong Kong.

In a speech in August at the city’s Foreign Correspond­ents’ Club (FCC), where Mr Mallet serves as vice president, independen­ce activist Mr Chan attacked China as an empire trying to “annex” and “destroy” Hong Kong.

China’s foreign ministry had asked the club to pull the talk, but the FCC refused, arguing that all sides of a debate should be heard and that it hosted a variety of speakers, including Chinese officials.

Britain and the United States have expressed concern over the visa refusal and its impact on press freedom.

A group of the city’s most influentia­l lawyers also hit back.

“Such rejection calls for an explanatio­n in light of its unpreceden­ted nature and its profound impact on Hong Kong’s press freedom,” 30 lawyers said in a statement.

The group makes up the legal subsector of the electoral committee that chooses the city’s leader.

The Progressiv­e Lawyers Group, said: “Any forced retreat of foreign media outlets would be a tragic loss for Hong Kong and must be vigilantly guarded against”.

A journalist­s’ alliance handed over petitions with more than 15,000 signatures to the government yesterday calling for an explanatio­n of its visa rejection.

Hong Kong authoritie­s have said they cannot comment on Mr Mallet’s case.

 ?? AFP ?? Chris Yeung, centre, of the Hong Kong Journalist Associatio­n speaks to journalist­s outside government headquarte­rs in Hong Kong yesterday.
AFP Chris Yeung, centre, of the Hong Kong Journalist Associatio­n speaks to journalist­s outside government headquarte­rs in Hong Kong yesterday.

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