Dateline
Hong Kong
Hong Kong's convergence with China could result in a head on
collision over questions of freedom of speech. Since Hong Kong plays
a critical and central role in Asian Pacific media and remains the
most important window on greater China, any such collision can be
expected to have global repercussions.
Hong Kong has served as base for China watchers for more than 150
years. Those sympathetic to Western interests have almost always been
free to work here. Morrison of the Times passed this way to report on
the Boxer uprising. Sun Yat Sen, the founder of modern China, took
refuge under the Union Jack, as he prepared the arguments for a
republican constitution. In more recent years, Hong Kong became a
staging centre for coverage of the Vietnam war and a listening post
on the turmoil of the Cultural Revolution. It is currently the most
important centre for Western foreign correspondents operating in
eastern and southeast Asia, with more than six hundred foreign
journalists based here. It is the regional headquarters for
international wire services, weekly news magazines, television and
radio media.
In the declining years of British colonial rule, restrictions
imposed on local publishers became more relaxed, allowing the local
Chinese reporters and editors many of the same freedoms enjoyed by
their Western colleagues. A diversified and complex local media was
permitted to flourish. By 1997, it included 59 daily newspapers, 675
periodicals, two commercial television companies, a subscription
television service, a regional satellite television service, and two
commercial radio stations. The government broadcaster, Radio
Television Hong Kong, which began transmitting in 1928, operated
seven radio channels in English and Cantonese. Its television service
produced programs which were carried on both commercial television
stations.
Freedom of the press in Hong Kong is enshrined in the Basic Law
which provides the constitution for the new Special Administrative
region. But questions remain about how those freedoms will be defined
in practice. At one extreme, one has a freewheeling western style
press, driven by the profit motive, obsessed with trivia and careless
with the facts. At the other, one finds the hard-line media of the
last great Stalinist state, directed by the Communist Party and
nettled by Western criticisms of authoritarianism, choosing to ignore
the rampant exploitation resulting from economic liberalisation.
In between fall many of the journalists concerned with questions
of freedom of speech. They are to be found both in Hong Kong and on
the mainland itself, reporting, as journalists do everywhere, what
they identify as of interest and importance to their publics. This
collection of reports on the Internet will seek to record
journalists' views and opinions and where possible include documents
pertinent to questions of freedom of speech. It aims to do so
progressively during the year of transition, 1997.
Alan
Knight, the Internet page
editor has presented a Ph.D. thesis examining the work of Australian
foreign correspondents in southeast Asia. While based in Hong Kong in
1993, his research on journalism took him to Cambodia, Indonesia,
Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, and Malaysia. A former Executive
Producer at the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, he has been a
journalist for more than two decades. He is currently a correspondent
member of the Hong Kong Foreign Correspondents Club and a Honorary
Research Fellow at the Centre for Asian Studies at Hong Kong
University.