DATELINE:
HONG KONG
Morrison of Peking in "native"
dress.
I was able to hold them [my publishers] hostage! : Dave
Lindorff, a freelance foreign correspondent who had been told once
too often that his cheque was in the mail. Lindorff
believes that distant editors' often have preconceptions about
Hong Kong which influence the way reporters are then asked to write
about it .They demand rewrites and frequently forget to pay.
Many people in mainland China do not understand very much about
the nature of China's resumption of sovereignty over Hong Kong. They
think that after the transition, Hong Kong will look like the
mainland, and that they will be able to come here to make a living.
Worst of all, some legends have been spreading. Hong Kong will become
a battlefield!. . . Ridiculous!: "Old Timer", a diarist on the Web
site, Hong Kong Lives in Transition.
American Public Television has launched a web site which records
the handover to China through the diaries of Hong Kong residents. The
site includes an extensive history of Hong Kong, a photo tour of the
city and opportunities for site visitors to post questions to the
diarists and discuss the events occurring there.
Brian Clark is the producer of the project. He's
also President of Global Media Design who spearheaded the design and
content efforts.
There is unquestionably a risk of wild, inaccurate and
irresponsible reporting. . .However, it is our job to try to convey
both the facts and the feel of the situation, as honestly as we can,
regardless of who we please or anger: Mike
Chinoy, CNN's Hong Kong Bureau Chief.
Mike Chinoy says that some of the hordes of reporters who will
come for the handover will expect to see "Tiananmen Two : the
butchers of Beijing sweeping through Hong Kong. He says the "storm
clouds" correspondents have been charting are real. But he adds that
there are layers of details, complexities, subleties and
uncertainties will determine which direction the storm will take.
These guys who are claiming we are being negative, they seem not
to understand the basic function of news. . .It is not our job to be
cheerleaders. : Keith
Richburg.
Mr. Richburg is the Southeast Asia Bureau Chief for the
Washington Post. He was the paper's African Bureau Chief from
1991 to 1994 after serving as the Philippines correspondent from
1986. He says that journalists have a duty to report "accurately and
fairly", irrespective of whether such reports are bad for
business.(See Thomas or Chua).
The media are mis-using the freedom they are getting. They are not
reporting truthfully! : Robert
Chua.
Mr.Chua is Chief Executive of CE TV, an Asian based satellite
television station. He is currently producing a "positive"
documentary of the Hong Kong handover, which will be sold to Chinese
state television. He was speaking at meeting to launch "Advance Hong
Kong"; a campaign to send representatives around the world to counter
bad publicity from correspondents reporting China. (See Richburg).
The public do not want government propaganda from Radio Television
Hong Kong [RTHK]. We never act that way. That is why we have
gained credibility. : M.L. Ng.
M.L. Ng is the host of a two hour , live talkback radio program,
Talkabout, broadcast of RTHK from Monday to Friday.The program seeks
to make legislators and officials accountable to the public through
questions and open discussion.
What newsmen are looking for is rioting in the streets, the
People's Liberation Army marching down the road with fixed bayonets:
Ted Thomas.
Ted Thomas, public relations specialist and former journalist,
believes that Hong Kong could be facing a public relations disaster
with the handover. He wants to mobilise journalists and broadcasters
to visit their colleagues around the world. Mr Thomas wants them to
carry the message that business will continue to boom in Hong Kong.
(See Richburg above).
They are calling me a censor. I am not! : Feng
Xiliang, the South China Morning Post's new
editorial advisor.
Mr. Feng is a journalist who has worked at the most senior levels
of mainland China's communist press. While he has lived outside China
for a number of years and is a well regarded associate of Hawaii's
East West Centre, his appointment at the Post has stirred
controversy among Hong Kong journalists concerned about possible
censorship.
As a true union, the Hong Kong Journalists Association will have
more work to do as a watchdog [after the hand over], to try
to get things on the record: Lai Pui
Yee.
Lai Pui Yee is vice chair person of the Hong Kong Journalists
Association. A US trained investigative journalist working as a
freelance reporter, she currently hosts a talk back radio show on
RTHK radio.
In South Africa we were covering the birth of democracy. In
Hong Kong we may be covering its death! : Mark Austin, ITN's Asia
Correspondent.
Just when you had thought you thought you had seen media
circuses, here comes the Hong Kong handover. But as Alan Knight
reports, Hong Kong bureaucrats are determined to avoid the
journalistic excesses of the past.
The permanent tension between order and freedom:
Newt Gingrich.
The Speaker of the US House of Representatives was making his only
public speech on a ten day Asian tour, on the eve of his visit to
greater China. He expressed concern about the preservation what he
called the key elements of Hong Kong society -- the rule of law, an
independent civil service and judiciary, respect for civil liberties,
freedom of religion and a free press.
Journalists all over the region envied the contempt in which we
[Hong Kong journalists] were held : Derek
Davies
Derek Davies was editor of the Far Eastern Economic Review
for a quarter a century; developing it from a somewhat obscure Hong
Kong Based business paper, to one of the region's leading sources of
informed news and analyses. He argues here that British civil
servants largely ignored the Hong Kong media, allowing it to flourish
and become the free-est press in the region.
Maybe we are replacing one set of [colonial] masters with
another: Emily Lau, Hong Kong's
first democratically elected female legislator.
Emily Lau is a Legislative Council representative for Hong Kong's
New Territories. A former correspondent for the Far Eastern
Economic Review, she is a past chair of the Hong Kong Journalists
Association. Ms. Lau is a leader of the Hong Kong based,
pro-democracy group, The
Frontier.
Virtual Censorship: Policing
the internet in Asia
China wants to impose the sort of censorship applied to newspapers
and electronic media. It frequently jams international radio
broadcasts and pressured Hong Kong's Star (satellite) Television to
remove BBC news from the East Asia footprint.
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