International rights groups on June 17 denounced Hong Kong authorities after local police mobilized more than 500 officers in a raid on the headquarters of local newspaper Apple Daily.
Among those arrested were the paper’s editor-in-chief Ryan Law and associate publisher Chan Pui-man. Cheung Kim-hung and Royston Chow, chief executive officer and chief operating officer of the paper’s publishing firm Next Digital, were also arrested.
“China, which controls Hong Kong, may be able to eliminate the paper, which it sees as an annoying critic, but only at a steep price to be paid by the people of Hong Kong, who had enjoyed decades of free access to information.”
“Hong Kong has been left with little free speech under the NSL (national security law), which aims to silence all dissent. Today’s arrests mark yet another step toward remaking Hong Kong in Beijing’s liking,” Victoria Hui, an HKDC board member, said.
Samuel Chu, HKDC’s managing director, said that journalists in Hong Kong, including Jimmy Lai, Bao Choy, and Nabela Qoser, were being targeted for “defending freedom of the press.”
“No regime can totally suppress the truth and truth-tellers,” Chu said.
Chris Yeung, chairperson of the Hong Kong Journalists Association, said the raid showed that press freedom in Hong Kong has been “severely undermined” by the national security law, according to Apple Daily.
Journalism Endangers China’s National Security: HK Official
Hong Kong police arrived at the Apple Daily headquarters at around 7:30 a.m. local time and sealed off all access to the building. According to Apple Daily, police officers prevented the paper’s journalists from working at their desks and accessed reporters’ computers.At around 8 a.m. local time, the Hong Kong government issued a press release stating that police officers from the city’s national security department had conducted a “search operation” at the paper’s headquarters, which included seizing “journalistic materials.”
In a separate press release, the Hong Kong government stated that the five directors’ residences had been searched.
Meanwhile, trading in shares of Next Digital at the Hong Kong Stock Exchange was suspended.
He also said the collusion charge was in relation to more than 30 articles published by Apple Daily since 2019 that sought to have foreign countries impose sanctions on China or Hong Kong, according to Li.
At noon, John Lee, Hong Kong’s security secretary, held a press conference during which he accused Apple Daily executives of using journalism as a “tool to endanger” national security. Additionally, he asked that “normal journalists” keep their distance from the “criminals” at Apple Daily.
Hong Kong police ended their raid at around 1:15 p.m. local time, confiscating computers and hard drives.
“Authoritarianism is waging a brutal war on [Apple Daily], a desperately endangered symbol of freedom in [Hong Kong],” Wu wrote.
“I’m out of words to describe my anger & sadness at witnessing this tragedy.”