DATELINE:
HONG KONG
You can have freedom of speech without democratic
government...but those freedoms may become difficult to exercise if
the government has no need for accountability. A paper presented
at the East West Centre Conference for Journalists, Hong Kong
Foreign Correspondents Club 15/11/97
I have just finished a stint at Radio Television Hong Kong, as
a civil service broadcaster. On my last shift, I edited an ran a BBC
report on the harassment of the Shanghai dissident, Bao Ge, who
sought exile in the United States. Mr. Bao complained of continuing
police harassment after the prison sentence imposed for criticising
the central government. In spite of China's developing economic
liberalism, such claims remain unprintable in the People's Republic's
state controlled press. Yet as a result of the "one country-two
systems" policy, I broadcast that news item in the Special
Administrative Region (SAR) without complaint or recrimination. In
Hong Kong, it seems to be business as usual.
The SAR retains freedom of the press. But that freedom is hedged
by growing problems associated with news gathering here. Under the
colonial regime, the last Governor had once been an elected
politician, accustomed to the slights inflicted and powers bestowed
by a libertarian press. The current Chief Executive, more used to the
absolutism of a family corporation, has hired professional public
relations consultants to soften his image. As a result, access to Mr.
Tung is strictly limited, with preference granted to foreign
correspondents servicing his powerful international business
electorate. Local journalists, whose readers didn't and won't get to
vote for Mr. Tung, are usually limited to asking one question each; a
PR device which makes it easy to deflect or simply ignore informed
inquiries. Questions attempting to penetrate the civil service
surrounding the Executive Council are frequently fobbed off, met
with silence or simply referred to the Government Information
Service, a British invention which prides itself in its attempts at
media control.
In a democratic society, reporters so treated would immediately
seek to draw on the research and opinions of the political
opposition. The Democrats, Hong Kong's most consistently popular
political party, still operate freely here. Yet the next election
process will ensure that the Democrats will be in a small minority
in a Legislative Council dominated by politicians who owe their
prominence, livelihood and continued political existence to
supporting Beijing and its Hong Kong appointed executive. Reporters
may derive some amusement from watching lifelong Marxists adroitly
back flip as they doggedly praise their tycoon led administration as
it refuses unions the right to collective bargaining, denies fair
trading legislation, or stops working class Chinese children from
re-uniting with their parents. But a lack of an effective legislative
opposition will deny journalists the voices they need to "balance"
reports composed through conventional political journalism
methodology.
In practical terms, you can have freedom of speech without
democratic government...but those freedoms may become difficult to
exercise if the government has no need for accountability.
Reporters can of course seek comment from outside the formal
political arena. Yet critics are "balanced" by disciplined
community organisations which can be expected to faithfully support
the party line. Such groups were created by the Chinese Communist
Party and co-ordinated through the New China News agency, to oppose
the colonial authorities. They still exist in post colonial Hong
Kong. When an instruction comes down from head office, the
"community" groups are able to call on Mr. Tung to implement the
instruction and applaud him for his community awareness when he
promptly does so. Even the Hong Kong Journalists Association, a
genuine union, has a doppelganger in the form of the Hong Kong
Federation of Journalists which draws its membership from party
controlled papers and which says that its main role is to build
better relations with Beijing. (During the handover, the Federation
opened an office in the convention centre's press room, sharing space
with China's National Television.)
Rejecting western modes of journalism and turning to patriotic
methods which already may be discredited on the mainland, will not do
any favours for journalists and the wider communities both here and
in greater China. If as the International Federation of Journalists
suggests, the first responsibility of a journalist is the public's
right to know, then more sophisticated reporting methods must be
sought to dig out the truth. It is here that journalism educators
have a role and a responsibility, if not a moral obligation to
influence future practices.
If Hong Kong is to be run in future as a business, then journalism
teachers must address the changing political circumstances and help
local journalists to use business affairs as a key to understanding
and penetrating an increasingly opaque political process. Hong Kong
journalists need to know modern investigative journalism techniques
drawn form international experience. In particular:
¥ The legislation and mechanisms which govern company operations.
¥ How to access information held on Hong Kong companies in the
United States and elsewhere.
¥ How to create and catalogue profiles of companies active in
China and southeast east Asia. The Philippines Centre for
Investigative Journalism might have some useful tips here.
¥ How to access the internet, as their colleagues in Guangzhou
already do, to bypass the news agencies and tap into the galaxy of
information available there.
Journalism education should not stop when graduates receive their
degrees. Journalism educators should encourage formal arrangements
with employers to take new techniques into the newsrooms. All
courses should be refereed by a panel of industry advisors if only to
ensure that journalism teachers have credibility in the industry
itself. Finally, we must reject the anachronistic academic approach
which values refereed articles placed in obscure academic journals
more than positive contributions to the journalism industry.
Academic journalism research should be directed towards finding
answers for industrial, ethical and practical problems. Then perhaps
we can help the media in Hong Kong and China will have a more
effective future.
Alan Knight