Hong Kong pro-democracy Stand News shuts down after police raid, arrests
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[December 29, 2021]
By Edmond Ng and James Pomfret
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong
pro-democracy media outlet Stand News shut down on Wednesday after
police raided its office, froze its assets and arrested senior staff on
suspected "seditious publication" offences, in the latest crackdown on
the city's media.
Stand News, set up in 2014 as a non-profit, was the most prominent
remaining pro-democracy publication in Hong Kong after a national
security investigation this year led to the closure of jailed tycoon
Jimmy Lai's Apple Daily tabloid.
The raid raises more concerns about press freedom in the former British
colony, which returned to Chinese rule in 1997 with the promise that a
wide range of individual rights would be protected, media advocacy
groups said.
"Stand News is now stopping operations," the publication said on
Facebook, adding all employees had been dismissed.
Steve Li, head of the police's national security department, told
reporters Stand News had published news and commentary inciting hatred
against authorities.
He said some of the articles said protesters went missing during the
city's 2019 pro-democracy unrest or were sexually harassed, which he
called "factually baseless" and "malicious." Li also said some articles
falsely claimed the Communist Party extended its powers through the
city's independent courts or called for foreign sanctions.
Li did not specify the exact articles. Reuters has not independently
reviewed any Stand News articles.
Li said police seized assets worth HK$61 million ($7.82 million) as well
as computers, phones and journalistic materials, and that he did not
rule out further arrests.
"We are not targeting reporters. We are targeting national security
offences," Li said.
Police said 200 officers searched the Stand News office and three men
and four women, aged 34-73, were arrested on suspicion of "conspiracy to
publish seditious publications".
Police did not identify them but media said four former members of the
Stand News board were arrested - former democratic legislator Margaret
Ng, pop singer Denise Ho, Chow Tat-chi and Christine Fang - as well as
former chief editor Chung Pui-kuen and acting chief editor Patrick Lam.
Chung's wife, Chan Pui-man, formerly with Apple Daily, was re-arrested
in prison, media said.
Reuters could not reach those arrested or their legal representatives.
Ronson Chan, Stand News deputy assignment editor and the head of the
Hong Kong Journalists Association (HKJA), was not among those arrested
but said police confiscated his computer, mobile, tablet, press pass and
bank records during a search of his home.
"Stand News has always reported news professionally," Chan told
reporters.
Hong Kong Chief Secretary John Lee told reporters he supported the
police action.
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Stand News acting chief editor Patrick Lam, one of the six people
arrested "for conspiracy to publish seditious publication" according
to Hong Kong's Police National Security Department, is escorted by
police as they leave after the police searched his office in Hong
Kong, China, December 29, 2021. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
"Anybody who attempts to make use of media work as a tool to pursue
their political purpose or other interests countering the law,
particularly offences that endanger national security, they are the evil
element that damage press freedom," Lee said.
'OPEN ASSAULT'
Earlier on Wednesday, scores of police were seen loading about three
dozen boxes of documents and other seized material onto a truck.
Steven Butler, Asia programme coordinator for the Committee to Protect
Journalists, said the arrests were an "open assault on Hong Kong’s
already tattered press freedom".
Sedition is not among the offences listed under a sweeping national
security law imposed by Beijing in June 2020 that punishes terrorism,
collusion with foreign forces, subversion and secession with possible
life imprisonment.
But recent court judgements have enabled authorities
https://www.reuters.com/world/china/
court-rulings-free-hong-kong-police-probe-older-offences-under-security-law-2021-10-19
to use powers conferred by the new legislation to deploy rarely used
colonial era laws covering sedition.
Authorities say the security law has restored order after often-violent
pro-democracy unrest in 2019. Critics say the legislation has set the
financial hub on an authoritarian path by quashing dissent.
'SPEECH CRIMES'
In June, hundreds of police raided the Apple Daily, arresting executives
for alleged "collusion with a foreign country". The newspaper shut down
shortly after.
On Tuesday, prosecutors filed an additional "seditious publications"
charge against Lai and six other former Apple Daily staff.
The Stand News charter stated independence and a commitment to
safeguarding "democracy, human rights, rule of law and justice".
After the Apple Daily raid, Stand News said it would stop accepting
donations from readers and had taken down commentaries from its platform
to protect supporters, authors and editorial staff, adding that "speech
crimes" had come to Hong Kong.
This year, the government has also embarked on a major overhaul https://www.reuters.com/article/us-hongkong-security-media-idUSKBN2AJ09J
of public broadcaster RTHK while authorities have said they are
considering "fake news" legislation.
The HKJA said it was "deeply concerned that the police have repeatedly
arrested senior members of the media" and searched newsrooms.
($1 = 7.7960 Hong Kong dollars)
(Additional reporting by Sara Cheng, Joyce Zhou, Jessie Pang, Donny
Kwok, Clare Jim and Marius Zaharia; Writing by Tony Munroe and Marius
Zaharia; Editing by Michael Perry, Robert Birsel and Emelia
Sithole-Matarise)
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