Latest for @Independent: On the final day of @appledaily_hk's operation, I talked to @limlouisa and Kai Ong from @amnesty to look at how the "death" of #HongKong's most popular pro-democracy newspaper under the #NSL will impact press freedom in the city. independent.co.uk/independentpre…
"Less than a week after a dramatic raid of its newsroom and freezing of its assets, Hong Kong’s most famous pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily announced on Wednesday that they will publish the last edition of its physical paper on Thursday ...
... and cease operations and online news updates by midnight on the same day. The announcement comes two days before the original plan of publishing the paper’s last edition on Saturday, which was made by the board of directors of its parent company Next Digital."
“Considering employees’ safety and the remaining manpower in the newsroom, we have decided to cease operation after midnight on Thursday and publish the last physical paper on the same day,” the paper wrote on its website.
Some observers point out that the government’s move to freeze almost all of Apple Daily’s assets is effectively a ban of the entire publication.
“You can’t arrest the chief editor, the most senior executives of the publication and still expect them to be able to operate. The government is banning Apple Daily because it’s critical of its policies," said Kai Ong from Amnesty International.
Louisa Lim says the closure of Apple Daily is a massive blow for media freedom and media diversity in the former British colony.
“Apple Daily has been the boldest and most outspoken pro-democracy newspaper in Hong Kong,” said Lim. “It’s also very popular with readers. On certain occasions, Apple Daily will run a different front page from all the other papers in Hong Kong.”
Ong and Lim both refer to the latest arrest of the Apple Daily columnist as “incredibly chilling” as it shows that writing one’s own opinion in a newspaper can get them arrested under the National Security Law.
“People working for local and international media outlets and people talking about anything related to Hong Kong in interviews can all be targeted under the law,” said Ong.
Apart from making arrests based on articles published by media outlets, Ong says the possible passage of a fake news law and the government’s tendency to discredit critical coverage as “fake news” all reflect the Hong Kong government’s determination to tighten control over media.
While it’s clear that the government wants to weed out opposition voices in the media, Lim says there are no clear red lines for journalists under the NSL. “You can say there are no red lines or the red lines are everywhere,” she pointed out.
“From what the officials said last week, It’s not clear whether the articles that led to the freezing of the assets and the arrests were opinion pieces or news articles.
I think it’s really hard for journalists to navigate this new landscape because no one knows where the red lines are,” Lim added.
Kai Ong says in the future, it will be really hard for journalists to hold the government accountable or report on anything critical of the government without feeling frustrated or worried. She thinks it’s all due to the limitless nature of the NSL.
“Journalists won’t know whether what they say or do will violate the NSL or not,” she said. “When they are doing journalistic work, there will always be the question at the back of their mind all the time. That can lead to potential self-censorship.”
Journalists are not the only ones that will be affected by the impact of the NSL on the media. Last month, former pro-democracy lawmaker Claudia Mo was denied bail after Hong Kong’s High Court considered WhatsApp messages between...
... her and journalists from major international news organizations as proof that she could continue to jeopardize the city’s national security if she were released on bail.
“All of these moves have a singular aim, which is stamping out any space for expression of other opinions,” said Louisa.
In the long run, Lim thinks it’s possible that international media outlets with regional headquarters in Hong Kong will try to reduce their operations in the city.
Last July, the New York Times announced that it would relocate its digital news operation in Hong Kong to South Korea, citing the uncertainty that came with the NSL as the main reason.
“In all honesty, maybe this is also something that the Hong Kong and Beijing government might have in mind,” said Lim. “Is it really in their interests to have coverage of what’s happening in Hong Kong?”
“If other news outlets move out of Hong Kong, we will have less coverage of the city. We’ve seen this trend in China as well, where foreign correspondents have been forced out and there is less coverage from China.
I think we are likely going to see that trend being replicated in Hong Kong,” she added.

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More from @WilliamYang120

24 Jun
Latest for @dwnews with colleague Joyce: Yesterday, #HongKong bid farewell to #AppleDaily in the rain. Reporters at the publication shared their sentiments with us.

"I just want to be a competent journalist, why do I have to suffer like this?" dw.com/en/apple-daily…
"Hours before Hong Kong's largest pro-democracy newspaper, Apple Daily, announced Wednesday it would cease operations once and for all, dozens of its journalists arrived at the printing plant early Thursday morning to observe the last edition roll off the press."
Emily, who joined the paper in 2019, said she had been on the front lines of the 2019 pro-democracy protests that shook Hong Kong for months, and led to a crackdown from Beijing on the semi-autonomous city's civil liberties.
Read 29 tweets
24 Jun
Sing Tao Daily reported that some Chinese foreign policy officials published an article that said the anti-sanction law passed by #Beijing will be executable in #HongKong and it can be used to make the city's national security legal framework more complete.cna.com.tw/news/acn/20210…
The article was published under the Chinese Communist Party school's affiliated publication and the two authors are government officials with foreign policy expertise.
In the article, they wrote the anti-sanction law will become a useful tool for #China to counter sanctions imposed by foreign countries. They proposed that since the #NSL enacted in #HongKong last year was carried out by being included in Annex 3 of the Basic Law in #HK.
Read 4 tweets
24 Jun
Breaking: #Taiwan reported 129 new cases and 6 deaths.
New Taipei; 54 Taipei: 35
Chen said the percentage of those discharged has reached 71.7%.
Read 21 tweets
24 Jun
In his first visit to Germany as US Secretary of State, @SecBlinken said the United States had "no better friend" than Germany as the two nations pledged a common front on Russia and #China following a still raw row over the Nord Stream pipeline. channelnewsasia.com/news/world/us-…
"I think it's fair to say that the United States has no better partner, no better friend in the world than Germany," Blinken said with Merkel at his side.
In a dramatic reversal from her unapologetically frosty relationship with Trump, Merkel said she saw a "common basis not only for naming the geopolitical challenges in the world but also for agreeing on a common approach".
Read 4 tweets
24 Jun
According to @WSJ, Chinese researchers directed the U.S. National Institutes of Health to delete gene sequences of early #COVID19 cases from a key scientific database, raising concerns that scientists may lack access to key information to study its origin. wsj.com/articles/covid…
The NIH confirmed that it deleted the sequences after receiving a request from a Chinese researcher who had submitted them three months earlier.

“Submitting investigators hold the rights to their data and can request withdrawal of the data,” the NIH said in a statement.
The removal of the sequencing data is described in a new paper posted online Tuesday by Jesse Bloom, a virologist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.
Read 8 tweets
23 Jun
An incredible investigation by @propublica and @nytimes about how #China spreads its #Xinjiang propaganda through "testimonial videos." "An analysis of more than 3,000 of the videos evidence of an influence campaign orchestrated by the Chinese government." nytimes.com/interactive/20…
"Most of the clips carry no logos or other signs that they are official propaganda.
But taken together, the videos begin to reveal clues of broader coordination — such as the English subtitles in clips posted to YouTube and other Western platforms."
"Beijing is trying to use savvier and more forceful methods to broadcast its political messages to a worldwide audience. And Western internet platforms like Twitter and YouTube are playing a key part."
Read 15 tweets

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