‘We will persevere’: Newspaper faces the weight of Hong Kong’s crackdown
After more than 200 police officers raided the newsroom of Hong Kong’s biggest pro-democracy newspaper, Apple Daily, a staff reporter messaged the editor-in-chief with a question: Should I still go to work?
“You decide,” the top editor, Ryan Law, replied. “This is the biggest news story in the world.”
The reporter hurried to the office. The Monday raid led reporters and editors to produce livestreams and more than two dozen articles that day about the police sweep. They detailed the arrest of the newspaper’s founder, Jimmy Lai, analysed the legal implications of the crackdown, and covered the international outrage it triggered.
“Apple will definitely keep fighting,” screamed a bold red banner headline in Tuesday’s edition.
Apple Daily is a tabloid with an agenda, known for both juicy morsels of celebrity gossip and hard-hitting investigations of government malfeasance. It has more than anything become known for its unabashed support of Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement – printing inserts for use as protest posters and reporting critically about Hong Kong’s leaders, police and the Chinese Communist Party.
Now the paper, which often breaks some of the biggest news in Hong Kong, has become one of the city’s biggest stories itself.
Lai, 72, along with his two sons and four executives from Apple Daily and its parent company, Next Digital, face possible charges of collusion with a foreign country or external elements under the new national security law. The newspaper’s headquarters have been searched and more than 30 crates of documents seized.
Reporters are worried that sources might get in trouble for speaking with them. The security law looms over everything they do, posing new risks of serious legal penalties for what they publish.
“I worry that through some circumstances outside my control, I’ll be unable to protect my sources,” said Icy Chung, a general assignment reporter. “I worry a day will come when we have to choose between turning ourselves in and turning our sources in.”
In Hong Kong’s newly restrictive environment, the freewheeling publication is both a target and a test case for the government’s authority over the media.
Before Beijing imposed the national security law on Hong Kong on June 30, the newspaper had sought to prepare for the possibility that it would one day become a target of authorities. Editors discussed whether they would have to destroy their reporting notes after the publication of a sensitive article. They debated the types of opinion pieces that might put them in legal jeopardy. They stopped using bylines on many stories to protect reporters.
Some reporters now worry about the survival of the newspaper, said Alex Lam, spokesman of the newspaper’s union and a reporter in the investigative team.
“We have a culture of instinctively wanting to go and help the company when it is in trouble,” he said. “The attitude now is one of meeting challenges together.”
The company organised legal briefings on how to respond if police raided the newsroom. Monday night, hours after the raid, the company had sent out a message to all employees with the phone numbers of its lawyers and guidelines on what information they are not required to give to police: their home addresses and passwords to their electronic devices.
Law said that he wanted the newsroom to continue to churn out the news – Apple Daily is one of the quickest in posting breaking news in
Hong Kong – despite the stress of coming under such scrutiny.
“No matter what circumstances and in what environment, please do your work,” he said. “We must be able to publish the news.”
Since the raid, Hong Kong residents have showered Apple Daily with support, lining up early Tuesday to buy print copies. The newspaper said it printed 550,000 copies of its Tuesday paper, compared with a regular run of about 70,000.
“I myself and many other Hong Kong people were trying to get a copy of Apple Daily to support the media and show our solidarity with Jimmy Lai,” said Joey Siu, an activist who posted a photo of herself with the paper she bought. “Of course we have differences in our political stances, but they are on the pro-democracy side, and we will defend our right to choose what media we want.”
Apple Daily has long faced challenges. As at traditional news outlets worldwide, the decline in print advertising and rise of new online competition has eroded its bottom line. For the fiscal year ending in March, Next Digital, the Apple Daily parent company saw revenue decline 11 per cent, while its net losses grew by nearly 23 per cent. Last year it established a paywall for its online content from Apple Daily and its sister paper in Taiwan.
Political pressure has compounded the difficulties. Major advertisers shun it for fear of business repercussions in mainland China. Its newspapers have been stolen and burned. Lai was the target of a murder plot in 2009 and in 2015, firebombs were thrown at Lai’s home and Next’s headquarters.
With major companies avoiding the paper, its pages now have advertisements from local supporters.
A Thai products store put a beer ad on the front page Wednesday. “Alcohol is good to drink,” it said. “This paper is good to read.”
Another, from an adult products store, used suggestive language to compliment Hong Kongers on their enthusiasm.
On Wednesday, Apple Daily staff took a brief moment to celebrate the return of Lai, after he was released on bail.
Lai, marched through his newspaper in handcuffs while police officers carried out the search Monday, was given a hero’s welcome.
He bowed and waved as employees applauded and handed him a bouquet of flowers.
“We will persevere and just” keep going, Lai told the team. “The media business is getting harder and harder. Let’s climb the mountain.”
New York Times