//https://www.wsj.com/articles/honoring-jimmy-lai-11624248153
OPINION REVIEW & OUTLOOK
Honoring Jimmy Lai
In Hong Kong, a valiant attempt to keep publishing the truth.
By The Editorial Board
June 21, 2021 12:02 am ET
The Committee to Protect Journalists was founded 40 years ago to fight for journalists who are “attacked, imprisoned or killed.” In this spirit, the CPJ on Monday announced it is honoring Hong Kong’s Jimmy Lai with its 2021 Gwen Ifill Press Freedom Award. Mr. Lai, the founder, owner and contributor to the Apple Daily newspaper, won’t be able to accept the award in person because he sits in prison in Hong Kong.
The CPJ honor comes after another police raid on the newsroom last week. Five Apple Daily execs were arrested, and two—editor-in-chief Ryan Law and chief executive officer Cheung Kim-hung —were charged under the new national security law and thus denied bail. The CPJ notes that Mr. Lai “fights for the right of his Apple News organization to publish freely, even as China and its backers in Hong Kong use every tool to quash them.”
The grim news is that those who want Apple silenced may be succeeding. We have learned that Apple may be only days away from stopping its presses. This itself is a lesson in freedom. Instead of directly censoring the publication, Hong Kong authorities, backed by China, have targeted the lifeblood of any news organization, its business operations.
The lesson of Apple is that freedom of the press doesn’t exist in the abstract. It depends on property rights. By freezing Apple’s corporate accounts, by stopping Mr. Lai from voting his shares (he holds 72% of the company), and by scaring people from advertising in Apple or doing business with it, Hong Kong has been trying to deny the paper the wherewithal to continue. Lenin understood this more than a century ago, recommending that Communists control newsprint and advertising to bring the press to heel.
There’s a warning here for other Hong Kong business enterprises that may not think they have a stake in what happens to Mr. Lai or Apple. Hong Kong authorities are stealing Mr. Lai’s company because they don’t like his political views—and they have done it by police orders, without due process or judicial review. If they can do it to his company, does anyone really believe they won’t do it to a bank or tech company that offends China?
The men and women at Apple have been making a valiant stand to keep publishing despite the risk of arrest and imprisonment. They are an example of real journalistic courage that should educate an American media that likes to play up its bravery in challenging the government while living under the protection of the First Amendment and a free society. Mr. Lai and his journalists have put their freedom at risk to challenge a real tyranny.
The CPJ award is richly deserved, and it should put a global spotlight on what is happening to Mr. Lai and Apple. As China’s Communist Party seeks to expand its political control over critics world-wide, often with the acquiescence of Hollywood and U.S. tech companies, Jimmy Lai speaks for everyone fighting for the cause of liberty.//
communist party founder in world 在 Apple Daily - English Edition Facebook 的精選貼文
The Hong Kong experience shows that no country in the world should ever trust China's Communist Party, which sees the universal values of freedom and democracy as a real threat to its regime, the city's last British governor Chris Patten has said at a special live Twitter chat with Next Digital founder Jimmy Lai.
Read more: https://bit.ly/3ks8CNg
港府與北京聯手DQ4名民主派議員,陸委會批評北京一再扼殺香港言論自由,脅迫香港立法會成為一言堂,國台辦回應指民進黨當局暴露亂港謀獨企圖。
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communist party founder in world 在 Sam Tsang 曾思瀚 Facebook 的最佳貼文
"Let’s not confuse the People’s Republic of China (PRC) with the people of China. The PRC is a collection of corrupt, murderous, dangerous tyrants who have imprisoned, impoverished and systemically denied freedom, equality and humanity to their own people. The PRC controls every inch of society, spying on its own people, managing every aspect of their economy and using human lives as bargaining chips. The militant dictates of the Chinese Communist Party do not end at China’s borders. They have a global network of spies that have been routinely caught stealing technologies and scientific research while also trying to infiltrate and compromise governments around the world. It is calculated. It is strategic. It is the PRC’s global vision. And it is anything but benign...Huawei claims it is a private company but cannot explain its ownership, beyond some comical tale of a 'blue book'. Its founder was a dedicated solider in China’s People Liberation Army and remains a prominent member of China’s Communist Party. But it’s not as if either of those things are choices in China. Whether Huawei executives claim the company is private or not is inconsequential. It was the Chinese government that arrested two Canadians — Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor — and tossed them in jail on trumped up charges as retaliation for the RCMP’s arrest of Huawei’s Meng Wanzhou. If Huawei is not under the control of the PRC, then why was the response so swift and diabolical? It’s obvious to anyone, except our own naive, Pollyanna government, that Huawei is the PRC. Security experts are concerned using Huawei equipment in our 5G network in Canada will expose information to so-called 'back-door' eavesdropping...to allow Huawei into our telecommunications network is to risk all information that passes through it. A big risk to our national security and a big risk for companies that do business here."