Hong Kong Police Chief Wants New Fake News Law To “tackle hostility against the police”

The Guardian reports..

Hong Kong’s new police chief has called for a “fake news” law to tackle “hostility against the police”, in what analysts see as an indication of the next phase of the crackdown on free speech in the former British colony.

“I understand that there are residents who are still hostile against us,” Raymond Siu, 55, said at his first media briefing since taking office on Friday. “In this regard, I told my colleagues that many of these torn relationships and hostility against the police are due to fake news.”

He added: “There is no legal definition of fake news at the moment, but if there is any legislation that could help us bring these people to justice, as law enforcers, we absolutely welcome it.”

The public image of the Hong Kong police force has been severely hit by pro-democracy protests in recent years. Since the summer of 2019, support ratings for the city’s once highly respected police force have plummeted, according to Hong Kong public opinion research institute.

But it was the talk of “fake news” amid the recent controversial closure of one of the city’s most popular newspapers Apple Daily that alarmed critics. They say that this Trump-era label could be used to further muzzle dissent.

Depress yourself further at  https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jun/26/hong-kong-needs-law-to-tackle-hostility-against-the-police-says-forces-new-chief

 

Also read this just published

National Security Law in Hong Kong: press freedom in grave danger after a year of endless attacks

 

The National Security Law imposed by Beijing just a year ago has been used to justify multiple abuses in Hong Kong, including the detention of journalists and the shutdown of Apple Daily newspaper. Reporters Without Borders (RSF) calls on democracies to step up pressure on the Chinese regime to prevent it from dismantling what remains of press freedom in the territory.

Just a year ago, on the 30th of June, 2020, the Beijing regime adopted the so-called National Security Law which targeted Hong Kong specifically. This deliberately vague and catch-all text was supposed to faciliate the fight against “terrorism”“secession”“subversion” and “interference of foreign powers”, four crimes punishable by the death sentence in the Mainland and frequently used against journalists. A year later, the worst fears of Hong Kong-based journalists and freedom defenders were proven to be true and at least ten of them have been arrested under this law and are facing life sentences  (see chronology below).

To date, five of them are still currently detained: Apple Daily founder and 2020 RSF Press Freedom Awards laureate Jimmy Lai, its Editor-in-Chief Ryan Law, its CEO Cheung Kim-hung, former legislator and journalist Claudia Mo and former journalist and activist Gwyneth Ho. This egregious regulation also justified, at the end of June, the freezing of Apple Daily’s financial assets, hence forced to cease all its activity.

“It has been one year since the Chinese regime and the Hong Kong government imposed the National Security Law to justify, under the appearance of legality, the dismantling of press freedom and the persecution of journalists and commentators who displease them” says Cédric Alviani, RSF East Asia bureau head, who calls on democracies “to put more pressure on the Chinese regime to end its authoritarian policies and ensure the restoration of press freedom, a right enshrined in the constitution of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and in the Basic Law which governs Hong Kong.”

Chronology: one year of persecuting press freedom defenders in Hong Kong

  • 30th June, 2020: The National Security Law comes into force.
  • 10th August, 2020: In parallel to a 200-police-officer raid on Apple Daily’s headquarters, its founder Jimmy Lai is arrested for “collusion with foreign forces” and later released on bail.
  • 6th January, 2021: Stand News’ former journalist and activist, Gwyneth Ho is arrested under suspicion of “conspiracy to commit subversion” and later denied bail.
  • 28th February, 2021: Former legislator and press freedom defender Claudia Mo is detained and charged for “conspiracy to commit subversion” and denied bail.
  • 16th April, 2021: Apple Daily founder Jimmy Lai is charged with his second offense under the National Security Law,  conspiracy to collude with foreign forces “, and sentenced to one year and two months in prison for unrelated charges.
  • 17th June, 2021: After another police raid on Apple Daily and the arrest of five senior staff, the government freezes the media outlet’s assets, forcing it to cease operations a week later.
  • 23rd June, 2021: Police arrest Apple Daily columnist, Yeung Ching-kee (alias Li Ping), for “conspiracy to collude with foreign forces, who is later released on a bail.
  • 27th June, 2021: Police arrest Apple Daily ‘ s senior journalist, Fung Wai-kong, for “collusion to endanger national security,” who is later released on a bail.

RSF submitted two urgent appeals urging the UN to “take all necessary measures” to safeguard press freedom in Hong Kong and obtain the immediate release of the Hong Kong media outlet Apple Daily founder and 2020 RSF Press Freedom Awards laureate, Jimmy Lai.

Hong Kong, once a bastion of press freedom, has fallen from 18th place in 2002 to 80th place in the 2021 RSF World Press Freedom Index . The People’s Republic of China, for its part, ranks 177th out of 180.

More at  https://rsf.org/en/news/national-security-law-hong-kong-press-freedom-grave-danger-after-year-endless-attacks