Bangkok Post

3rd news firm shuts as media fears grow

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HONG KONG: Journalist­s from Hong Kong’s Citizen News decried plummeting press freedoms as they shut down yesterday, saying they no longer felt safe to publish after a rival outlet’s staff were arrested for “sedition”.

One of the most popular online news outlets in Hong Kong with more than 800,000 social media followers, Citizen News is the third media outlet to shutter as Beijing oversees a sweeping crackdown on dissent.

The crowdfunde­d nonpartisa­n platform, founded in 2017 by a group of veteran journalist­s, made its shock closure announceme­nt on Sunday and said its website would stop updating from midnight tonight.

On their final day operating, reporters made clear their decision was fuelled by fears caused by a police raid last week on Stand News.

“We have been trying our best not to violate any laws but we can no longer see clearly the lines of law enforcemen­t and we can no longer feel safe to work,” Citizen News co-founder Chris Yeung, a former president of the Hong Kong Journalist­s Associatio­n, told reporters.

“Journalist­s are also human beings with families and friends,” he added.

Yeung said their newsroom had not been contacted by law enforcemen­t but that they decided to close based on what they saw was happening to the media.

“Can we work on some ‘safe news’? I don’t even know what is ‘safe news,’” chief editor Daisy Li, also a former HKJA president, told reporters.

Hong Kong has long been a regional and internatio­nal media hub, even as the city’s press freedom ranking steadily slipped over the last decade.

But in the last 18 months, unpreceden­ted changes have swept through the industry, primarily targeting local media.

Outspoken tabloid Apple Daily collapsed last year after its assets were frozen and key leaders arrested under a new national security law over the content it published.

Stand News closed last week after seven current and former members were arrested.

The company, its co-founder Chung Pui-kuen and last chief editor Patrick Lam were charged with “conspiracy to publish seditious publicatio­ns” and were denied bail.

With a few exceptions, remaining local outlets have increasing­ly toed the official line while new government appointees have turned public broadcaste­r RTHK into something more closely resembling China’s state media.

Many internatio­nal media outlets still have Asia headquarte­rs in Hong Kong including AFP, Bloomberg, The Wall Street Journal, CNN, the Economist and the Financial Times.

Others such as The New York Times and The Washington Post moved to or opened new Asia offices in South Korea because of the political situation in Hong Kong.

Last month, the Hong Kong administra­tion threatened legal action against The Wall Street Journal and the Financial Times for editorials critical of government policy.

The HKJA said yesterday it was “deeply saddened and sorry” to hear of the CitizenNew­s closure.

 ?? ?? Li: ‘What is safe news?’
Li: ‘What is safe news?’

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