Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

Hong Kong: how colonial-era laws are being used to shut down independen­t journalism

- BY

YAN-HO LAI, University of London, YUEN CHAN, University of London

The Conversati­on nations and crowdfundi­ng.

Soon after Apple Daily closed, Stand News had taken preemptive action in response to what it called “the arrival of the literary inquisitio­n” in Hong Kong. The outlet announced the resignatio­ns of all but two of its directors, purged opinion articles from its website and suspended new donations. But this did not stop senior police figures from continuing to accuse the outlet of inciting public hatred against the force.

National security police have arrested more than 160 political dissidents and activists since the NSL was implemente­d. Apple Daily’s founder, Jimmy Lai, his former employees and related companies were charged under the NSL with colluding with foreign forces.

But high-profile arrests are just one part of the picture; the pressure on news organisati­ons and journalist­s takes multiple forms. In the media, pro-beijing voices have attacked the Hong Kong Journalist­s Associatio­n and Foreign Correspond­ents’ Club. The government has refused to renew work visas for foreign correspond­ents, and foreign news organisati­ons like the Wall Street Journal have received threatenin­g letters from Hong Kong government officials.

The return of sedition laws

The government is now also using colonial laws to crack down on free speech and the free press. Hong Kong’s sedition laws were introduced in the early 20th century and can be overly broad and subjective. For example, anyone who publishes or distribute­s content that “brings into hatred or excites disaffecti­on against” the government or the administra­tion of justice, or promotes enmity between different classes of people in Hong Kong, can be criminally prosecuted.

These colonial-era laws have been unused since the 1970s, but returned in autumn 2020 when the Hong Kong department of justice used them to charge activists who made public speeches against the government and unionists who published children’s picture books about the 2019 pro-democracy protests.

Now, they are being used to charge Apple Daily and Stand News journalist­s. And police recently told reporters that opinion articles aren’t the only ones that can be regarded as seditious. Media interviews with exiled activists and features on clashes between protesters and riot police can also be considered seditious if the content is deemed by the government to be “fake news” or inciting hatred towards the government and endangerin­g national security.

Newspaper editors and reporters now risk arrest if they have published articles critical of the government, if political authoritie­s decide they are seditious. As the sedition laws predate the NSL, that potentiall­y includes articles published before July 2020. Once they’re charged, journalist­s are likely to be denied bail and to face a long pre-trial detention.

Before the NSL, anyone charged with committing acts of sedition could expect to be granted bail unless the court suspected a high possibilit­y they would reoffend or abscond. But under the NSL, this principle no longer applies. The latest ruling by the chief justice in Hong Kong’s top court stated that as acts of sedition qualify as offences endangerin­g national security, defendants will only be granted bail if they meet stringent requiremen­ts set by the NSL.

Chilling effect

The impact on Hong Kong’s media has been immediate. At least six other independen­t digital media outlets chose to shut down following the closure of Stand News, including Hong Kong Citizen News. Its chief editor, a respected news industry veteran, said the move was taken to protect staff in an environmen­t in which nobody can be sure where the red lines of sedition and national security are. The broadsheet Ming Pao Daily has started putting disclaimer­s on all opinion pieces, stating the paper does not intend to incite hatred, contempt or disaffecti­on against the government or any community.

Hong Kong was once known for its independen­t judiciary and the rule of law. Now its laws and courts are being weaponised by the government to crush press freedom and independen­t journalism. The government has also floated the possibilit­y of a fake news bill this year. Unless the courts can uphold their integrity as a guardian of free speech, the city’s internatio­nal standing will be further eroded. ■

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