An uneasy status quo prevailed during the first full year of Chinese
sovereignty after the handover of the former colony by Britain in 1997. Hong
Kong journalists are finding a relative lack of openness in the administration
of Tung Chee-hwa, the chief executive, but they still enjoy one of the freest
presses in Asia.
In the grips of its worst economic downturn in a generation and with China
cracking down on free expression in the mainland, Hong Kong remains both
the international center for independent Chinese-language journalism and
the headquarters for most of the regional media.
Fear of political pressure and signs of an uncharacteristic reticence to
ruffle feathers continue to surface, however. In July, television reporter
Christopher Leung angrily denounced the failure of China Television Network
(CTN) to air a documentary he had produced on ethnic unrest in the Western
province of Xinjiang. The documentary, "Crying Wolf," offered a rare glimpse
into a little-known Muslim separatist movement in one of China's most remote
and forbidden areas. Leung said the piece was killed because CTN, a satellite
network owned by Taiwanese and broadcast in Mandarin to Chinese audiences
worldwide, caved in to political pressure from Beijing, a charge the network
denied. As a result of the controversy, Leung quit his job and returned to
the United States, his adopted home.
Local reporters and editors say that self-censorship of issues that might
be sensitive to Beijing remains a problem, as it has been for several years,
even before the handover. Other concerns are on the horizon. A provision
in Hong Kong's Basic Law, which governs the territory as a Special Autonomous
Region of China, mandates the eventual drafting of a law punishing "sedition."
Journalists and civil libertarians worry that the definition of sedition
could make it a crime to publish material related to independence for Tibet
or Taiwan -- topics that are extremely sensitive to Beijing. Others complain
that the government is less accessible than it was during the last years
of British rule. |
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