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Media Tycoon’s Arrest Sends Warning to Hong Kong’s Free Press

Hong Kong media tycoon’s Arrest wasn’t entirely unexpected, but it still shook the foundations of press freedom.

Media Tycoon’s Arrest Sends Warning to Hong Kong’s Free Press
Copies of the Apple Daily newspaper, published by Next Digital Ltd., featuring the company’s chairman Jimmy Lai on the front page are arranged for distribution at a sorting area in Hong Kong, China. (Photographer: Roy Liu/Bloomberg)

Right before China retook control of Hong Kong in 1997, tycoon Jimmy Lai started Apple Daily in part to promote democracy in the city. For 25 years the newspaper survived advertising boycotts and political pressure but never backed off its tough coverage of the Chinese government and pro-Beijing lawmakers.

It may not last through the summer. Hong Kong police arrested Lai and several of his top executives on Monday and sent hundreds of officers to search the Apple Daily offices, a demonstration of the broad potential for the new national security law to silence criticism and dissent beyond pro-democracy protests and activism.

Media Tycoon’s Arrest Sends Warning to Hong Kong’s Free Press

Passed in June, the legislation bars “crimes of secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces” as interpreted by the Chinese government and enforced by Beijing’s new security office in Hong Kong. Lai’s arrest wasn’t entirely unexpected, but it still shook the foundations of press freedom in the financial center and raised fears about what might come next.

His arrest under the security law was part of an investigation into an online activist group that received more than HK$1 million ($129,000) funding from overseas bank accounts, the South China Morning Post reported Tuesday, citing unidentified people.

Agnes Chow, a prominent activist and founding member of the-now dissolved pro-democracy Demosisto party, was also arrested for allegedly breaching the security law, Cable TV reported Monday night.

Media Tycoon’s Arrest Sends Warning to Hong Kong’s Free Press

For the global business community, which relies on the rule of law and stability that Hong Kong offers, threats to the free press are troubling, said Imogen T. Liu, a political economist affiliated with Maastricht University in the Netherlands. “Hong Kong is attractive to international investors because it has a reputation for market discipline and transparency that was institutionalized under British rule,” she said. “Free speech is part of this liberal image, along with free market competition and government non-intervention.”

Foreign officials expressed concern over Lai’s arrest. U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s spokesman James Slack said he was “deeply concerned.” U.S. Secretary of State Michael Pompeo tweeted that the arrest was “further proof that the CCP has eviscerated Hong Kong’s freedoms and eroded the rights of its people.” The European Union condemned the arrests, renewing calls for respect of the basic rule of law, wrote Peter Stano, lead spokesperson for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy for the European Commission.

Lai’s Next Digital Ltd. soared as much as 669% before closing 331% higher on Tuesday, a day after social media posts urged investors to buy shares of the company following his arrest and police raid of his flagship newspaper.

Journalists have been concerned about China’s tightening grip on free speech in Hong Kong at least since 2018, when local authorities declined to renew the work visa of the Asia news editor for the Financial Times. It was thought to be the first expulsion of a foreign journalist since the 1997 handover and suggested a bolder Chinese influence on the city.

Those concerns only grew this year. After the U.S. placed restrictions on Chinese media, the government in Beijing expelled Americans working for the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post and said they weren’t welcome in Hong Kong. In July, the New York Times announced it was moving its digital news operation from Hong Kong to Seoul.

The Foreign Correspondents Club, Hong Kong, which advocates for press freedom in Asia, condemned the arrests and newsroom raid on Monday, saying they “signal a dark new phase in the erosion of the city’s global reputation.” Last week the club had called for both the U.S. and the Chinese governments to stop using journalists as political canon fodder: “This downward spiral of retaliatory actions aimed at journalists helps no one, not least of all the public that needs accurate, professionally produced information now more than ever.”

Apple Daily will apply for an injunction against the police’s seizure of journalistic material from its offices on Monday, RTHK reported, citing the paper’s editor-in-chief Ryan Law. Law said information from Apple Daily’s charity fund that was taken away by officers involved news material.

Media Tycoon’s Arrest Sends Warning to Hong Kong’s Free Press

‘Highly Unusual’

That statement also said that journalists have reported delays in new or renewed visas, which it called “highly unusual for Hong Kong.” Meanwhile, local outlet the Standard reported that journalist visas were now being vetted by a “national security unit” within the Hong Kong Immigration department, a new process that more closely mirrors China’s close scrutiny of foreign media.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry’s Hong Kong branch said late Monday that the FCC’s statement “misrepresented the truth, heaped groundless accusations upon the National Security Law and law-enforcement efforts of the Hong Kong police, and tried to whitewash and justify Jimmy Lai and other criminal suspects.”

“Eagerly justifying Jimmy Lai is nothing short of siding with the forces sowing trouble in Hong Kong and China at large,” the office said in a statement.

Locally, Wilson Li Chung-chak, a freelancer for Britain’s ITV and former member of the now-disbanded student activist group Scholarism, was arrested for collusion with a foreign country or external elements, the first time a freelance journalist was charged under the new law, according to the South China Morning Post.

The effects have been chilling. Selina Cheng, an investigative reporter at local news outlet HK01, said senior management has begun to restrict the kinds of stories their reporters can work on. “When editors are worried about getting into trouble they naturally won’t push reporters to do more reporting on topics they don’t feel comfortable with,” she said.

Media Tycoon’s Arrest Sends Warning to Hong Kong’s Free Press

Even Apple Daily had taken steps to protect its reporters and stopped printing bylines after the law passed.

“Other media outlets looking at what happened to Apple Daily today know that if they speak out against the government -- like Apple Daily did -- they will face the same consequences,” said Martin Lam, a reporter who’s covered Hong Kong politics for the paper for 13 years. “They will be more cautious of what they report in the near future.”

‘Exactly How the Law Is Supposed to Work’

The new law has also taken aim at literature. Several books by pro-democracy activists were removed from Hong Kong libraries and are currently “under review” to see if they run afoul of the new law.

“Pulling books out of the library, arresting pro-democracy activists -- this is exactly how the law is supposed to work,” said Jimmy Chan Hing-chi, a political economics professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. “In the long run, as freedom of expression is undermined further and further, Hong Kong’s reputation as an international financial center may gradually erode.”

Minh Bui Jones, editor-in-chief of the pan-Asian literary magazine, Mekong Review, said less than three weeks after the law passed, his printing company told him it had been ordered by authorities to stop printing the magazine. Jones’ attempts to follow up went unanswered, and he found a different printer.

“I would still like to publish in Hong Kong,” said Jones, praising the printers, the location, and the legacy of other Hong Kong-based publications including the Far Eastern Economic Review. “But it’s getting harder and harder, and at some point you’ll just give up.”

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