Baltimore Sun

After arrests, Hong Kong paper raises print run

- By Zen Soo and Alice Fung

HONG KONG — Hong Kong pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily increased its print run more than fivefold to 500,000 copies as residents lined up Friday to buy the paper in a show of support for beleaguere­d press freedoms, a day after police arrested five top editors and executives.

The raid on the paper’s offices by hundreds of police and security agents — along with the freezing of $2.3 million worth of its assets — marked the first time a sweeping national security law has been used against the media. It was the latest sign of a widening crackdown on civil liberties in the semi-autonomous city, which has long cherished freedoms that don’t exist elsewhere in China.

Police said the editors were arrested on suspicion of foreign collusion to endanger national security, based on over 30 articles that authoritie­s said had called for internatio­nal sanctions against China and Hong Kong.

On Friday, the National Security Department charged two men with collusion with a foreign country to endanger national security, according to a government statement. The two will appear in court on Saturday.

It did not name them, but the South China Morning Post newspaper cited an unnamed source saying they are Apply Daily’s chief editor Ryan Law and Cheung Kim-hung, the CEO of Apple Daily’s publisher Next Digital. The other three were being detained for investigat­ion.

The front page of Friday’s edition splashed images of the five editors and executives led away in handcuffs. Police also confiscate­d 44 hard drives of news material.

A quote from Cheung said “Hang in there, everyone.”

 ?? ANTHONY KWAN/GETTY ?? A woman purchases multiple copies of the Apple Daily newspaper on Friday in Hong Kong.
ANTHONY KWAN/GETTY A woman purchases multiple copies of the Apple Daily newspaper on Friday in Hong Kong.

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