Hong Kong Starts Denying Visas to Foreign Correspondents
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Hong Kong Starts Denying Visas to Foreign Correspondents
<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJxNUk1zmzAQ_TXmZkZIIsBBB09cd-wEN22aGOfCCLRg2ViikgjBv76y3UM1Wmn27dfMe1tzB602E-u1dcH1Kd3UA1Mw2g6cAxMMFkwpBYtpiiKEAsGoiNI4DaQtGwNw5rJjzgwQ9EPVyZo7qdW1AJOM0ODABOYZJwg4jQQRVZoI-hAljfdoBXEN97F8EBJUDQw-wUxaQdCxg3O9nZHFDK_8Hccx5FZyC8pJBV1Y67OHe28HrdqTt7kANc0_peXzRhuQrZrX2hiwvVY-5HyzldMnUDOyhGkT1fh9KnB3Wh91tF22Y_57MT4_bsaKbNE_HG2Xa5ov12T7OEq-WyGPfW2POckv33C-PMU-v69JLn_IzSh2a5cf8zi__JQev3j_hl_7PRebbr_bIr7LhrVC4UtRvD19FMfF28seFZl6dU-1wJj_klF0-XhfxV8d-U432f6Pp5phhCN_Mq9ARNIQh02SZYAEplnjWUx4yFWjuwPYGUXnFod2qKzj9enKUmCY7M7giWvBaJ_QXkW7Rbxmpf_Pg5JuKkHxqgNxl9Pdl-ImcNmCAuOXRZTcseiBJCR6QFmWYHyXz-tNKU4RTmjgRwvtqxT7X66_EevRsw>Toeing
the government line recommended
Nov 19
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By: Tim Hamlett

<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJxVUsuu3CAM_Zphl4hngAWLq0r9jYiHk6E3gRTIvZ1-fclkVYRsY2Mfy8feNlhzeZkj14YuMbfXASbBd92gNSjorFDmGIzgChOMUTA8ECUUinVeCsBu42ZaOQEdp9uity3mdCVQphlHT2MpC14p6wUDrCfnPaEkgF1AS4YXccPaM0RIHgx8QXnlBGgzz9aO-mAfD_qzXx_SWE9Xm_Wfo897d8XdrtD1As0_L93LtPygP37fBvtYcw79vWzzUfJaoNb4Bd1fG8DRM24IKi4QccF04U7_CT1eBsDCOa_44KxlA2cSBi2IGmxwjDqQUis-Vjba3f7NyX7Xu69e457F23w3Wd-mXxyTVpDB6yAHHhwMbtJ4INjJMEniJqVmIrD-owUefx2womgopqQf3YdPmBrpuEitAQfK9eJASDvatOTt2TE43lf635BQMXHboUJaoeT-Yb34ekd6i3PX-5lie82QrNsg3Ey2ex_e3M4rJCh9T8JsmyETk4xMWGtJ6c1cp5pzqjCVHHXokHtWMrZG21FbTLD9AyiiyYE>

The news that Presidents Biden and Xi have agreed to more generous visa
arrangements for each other's journalists will have attracted attention in
Hong Kong, where relations between the government and the resident foreign
press have been rocky lately.

Hong Kong's large corps of correspondents, or at least its upper crust,
enjoy the use of a picturesque listed building leased from the Hong Kong
government (above) as their clubhouse and have traditionally been cosseted
by a government eager to be seen abroad as effective and humane.

The rising levels of political turbulence since 2014 have seen this
relationship go downhill. In recent years, there have been recurrent
complaints about difficulties or delays in getting work visas for
correspondents to come to Hong Kong. And some who were already in the city
have been effectively expelled.

The first was Victor Mallet of the Financial Times, who had presided as
Vice President of the Foreign Correspondents' Club (the president was away)
at a lunch meeting in 2018 addressed by a local politician abhorred by the
government. Last year, Chris Buckley of the New York Times was refused
permission to stay, as was Aaron McNicholas, who had been offered the
editorship of the Hong Kong Free Press, which is not the government's
favorite news outlet.

No reason was given for these decisions. The government has also refused to
explain the refusal to renew the visa of the Economist's Wong Sue-lin last
week. Wong, who is Australian, had not featured in any public spats. But
the Economist's coverage of Mr Xi's progress towards immortality may have
gone down badly.

The government had just fallen out with Bloomberg opinion writer Matthew
Brooker. “Attempts to undermine Hong Kong's electoral system with
sensationalist and biased reporting are extremely deplorable,” Hong Kong
official Derick Tsang wrote to the editor. Mr Brooker is a Hong Kong
resident and so does not require a visa. Whether that helps will be closely
watched.

The FCC has managed of late to get into hot water in its own right. China's
Foreign Ministry in Hong Kong takes the lead in dealing with foreign
correspondent matters and was incensed when the club surveyed its members,
discovering that 84 percent thought conditions had deteriorated, 56 percent
of them were thinking of leaving the city and 56 percent had self-censored.

In full wolf warrior mode, the ministry statement attacked the FCC:* “Smearing
of Hong Kong’s press freedom and playing-up of the chilling effect are
interference in Hong Kong affairs…*

*We urge the FCC to distinguish right from wrong, respect the rule of law
in the HKSAR, and stop driving wedge in Hong Kong and meddling in Hong Kong
affairs under whatever pretext.”*

Actually, people have been trickling away already. After the enactment of
Hong Kong's new national security law last year the New York Times moved a
third of its staff to South Korea. The Washington Post moved its regional
HQ, also to Seoul. Veteran journalist Steve Vines departed for the UK
complaining of “white terror” inflicted on critics of the government.
Initium, a news website, departed en bloc to Singapore.

Other realignments were quieter. Readers of the Guardian may not have
noticed that much of its Hong Kong coverage is now filed from Taipei.

Local journalists may feel that the FCC is turning up rather late for the
funeral of press freedom in the city, which for them effectively ended when
the government closed Apple Daily – a popular pro-democracy tabloid – froze
its funds and arrested many of its senior staff.

The national security law confers wide powers on the police, who have a
special national security unit, and also makes it hard for arrested people
to get bail. Other criticized features include juryless trials and a picked
list of judges to preside over them. But the attribute which gives the law
much of its effect on media work is the vagueness of the description of
offenses. Hardly a week goes by without an official of one kind or another
announcing that some hitherto commonplace activity “may be a violation of
the national security law.”

The effect, as one local writer put it in a picturesque local variation on
the Sword of Damocles, is like eating in a dining room with a cobra in the
chandelier. Everything looks normal but you never know when.

Foreign news organizations no longer expect visas to be issued or renewed
as a matter of course, as they used to be. They are also hampered by Hong
Kong's following of China's “zero Covid” policy, which makes it hard for
correspondents to travel around the region.

Nobody expects reporting from Hong Kong to be abandoned altogether. But
back-office staff, editors, and administrators can be moved elsewhere. As
the FCC may have to. During the row over Victor Mallet's expulsion a former
Hong Kong Chief Executive, Leung Chun Ying, suggested that the government
should cancel its lease on the building. It would be a pity to lose a
handsome venue. But the way things are going something smaller might soon
suffice.
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