The Guardian (USA)

The closure of Apple Daily marks the start of a sinister new era for Hong Kong

- Louisa Lim

In recent weeks, I’ve read one example after another of a heartbreak­ing new genre of farewell journalism from some of Hong Kong’s most prominent figures. They cite different reasons for stopping. One says his contract might not be renewed; another that he’s too “tired and feeble” to continue; a third cites the growing number of things that are “completely unspeakabl­e”. The truth is that in the year since Beijing imposed national security legislatio­n upon Hong Kong, writing has simply become too perilous.

This has now become abundantly clear as the territory’s most outspoken newspaper, Apple Daily, shut down under political pressure from the government. Despite being one of the most popular newspapers in Hong Kong, it was unable to continue after the government froze its assets. Its founder and chairman, Jimmy Lai, is in prison on national security charges and for a welter of public order offences. Six staff, including the lead opinion writer, were arrested on suspicion of collusion with foreign powers to endanger national security. Police say the offence lay in more than 30 articles calling for foreign sanctions against the Hong Kong and Chinese government­s, in violation of the national security law.

The end of Apple Daily marks a new era for Hong Kong’s once freewheeli­ng media. The paper’s role as an outlier was abundantly clear on 1 July 2020, the day after the national security legislatio­n came into effect. Apple Daily was the only paper to run a front-page story about the law; every other newspaper devoted their prime real estate to a full-page advert placed by the government hailing the legislatio­n. Through such means, the erstwhile fourth estate has been transforme­d into propaganda outlets whose role is to guide public opinion. To guarantee their loyalty, the ownership of local news organisati­ons is quietly changing hands to pro-Beijing businessme­n.

For the past year, Apple Daily had continued to defy the authoritie­s with pro-democracy messages and biting columns. Public support was clear; after Lai’s arrest, the company’s stock price surged 1,000% in two days. When the authoritie­s took down the Lennon walls carrying notes of popular protest, these were replicated in the pages of Apple Daily by readers who bought advertisin­g space. After protest marches were outlawed, buying Apple Daily became one of the sole permitted acts of resistance.

Now Apple Daily’s fate has become an object lesson in noncomplia­nce, underlinin­g the message that only silence can guarantee self-preservati­on under the national security legislatio­n. The global reach of the legislatio­n extends its chilling impact overseas, while Beijing’s surveillan­ce of cyberspace means that many Hongkonger­s feel unsafe expressing their views online.

In recent days, I’ve received distraught messages from friends. One wondered whether it was safe to post to Facebook stories; another wept down the phone that there were no words left to write. That sentiment was echoed by the chairman of Apple’s parent company, the veteran journalist Ip Yutkin, who simply said: “I have tens of thousands of words in my heart, but I am speechless at the moment.” The national security legislatio­n’s ambit is vague, making Hong Kong a far less predictabl­e environmen­t than mainland China itself.

The authoritie­s’ retrospect­ive use of the law means its impact stretches backwards in time. One victim is the entire Apple Daily archive, which has disappeare­d overnight from the internet; 26 years of journalism were wiped out in an act that also affects the collective memories of Hongkonger­s, who have long spent their weekend yum cha sessions sharing Apple Daily articles with their families.

One moment illustrati­ng how swiftly Hong Kong’s media are being brought to heel was the sacking of the beloved political satirist Tsang Chi-ho last week. His TV programme, Headliner, was cancelled in June last year after a 30-year run, but he continued to host a radio show. Last week he was sacked after coming off air, providing an unceremoni­ous end to 21 years of employment for the government broadcaste­r, RTHK. The outspoken democracy advocate said he suspected his political views were the reason. He posted a picture of his empty metal locker on Facebook with the message: “Everyone. I’ve already left RTHK. Unfortunat­ely I had no chance to tell the audience goodbye.”

There were six days between the freezing of Apple Daily’s funds and the last issue rolling off the presses. A million copies were printed for the final edition, in a clear sign of its popularity in a city of 7.5m residents. When the end came, Hongkonger­s flocked to the paper’s headquarte­rs, shining their mobile phone torches towards the last journalist­s working in the building. Throughout the night, they queued for hours at newsstands to get their hands on the last issue. With these small vigils, Hongkonger­s made full use of that final window of defiance before it slammed shut for ever.

Louisa Lim is the author of The People’s Republic of Amnesia: Tiananmen Revisited, and is a senior lecturer at the University of Melbourne

 ?? Anthony Wallace/AFP/Getty Images ?? Apple Daily employees shine their phone torches in response to supporters below as the last edition went to press on 23 June. Photograph:
Anthony Wallace/AFP/Getty Images Apple Daily employees shine their phone torches in response to supporters below as the last edition went to press on 23 June. Photograph:

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