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Hong Kong’s Citizen News to close, amid fears for staff’s safety | Freedom of the Press News


Independent online outlet to close on Tuesday, citing fears for its staff and an increasingly hostile media environment.

Hong Kong independent online news outlet Citizen News is to close on Tuesday after five years, in the face of what it described as a deteriorating media environment in the Chinese-ruled territory and concerns about the safety of its staff.

The announcement, made on social media on Sunday, comes less than a week after some 200 police raided the office of Stand News, another independent media outlet, accusing its senior editors of sedition.

Citizen News said it had come to its decision with a “heavy heart”, noting the outlet had been established in 2017 by veteran journalists committed to serving the public and the “greater public good” with their reporting.

“We have never forgotten our original intent,” the media group said in a statement. “Sadly, we can no longer strive to turn our beliefs into reality without fear because of the sea change in our society over the past two years and the deteriorating media environment.”

Beijing promised to respect Hong Kong’s freedoms and way of life, including free media, for at least 50 years when the territory was returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

But pro-democracy activists and rights groups say freedoms have been eroded, particularly since Beijing imposed the National Security Law on the territory in June 2020 in the wake of mass democracy protests in 2019.

The closure of Citizen News comes days after the raid on Stand News in which senior editors were charged with conspiring to publish seditious materials and denied bail.

Last year, the hugely popular Apple Daily was forced to close after a national security raid on its offices. Jimmy Lai, its founder and one of Hong Kong’s most prominent supporters of democracy is in jail facing a number of charges under the law. Other senior editors also face charges.

Hong Kong authorities reject claims of a crackdown and deny targeting the media.

The security law criminalises what Beijing deems acts of “secession”, “subversion”, “terrorism”, and “foreign collusion to intervene in the city’s affairs”.

Since it was implemented in June last year, more than 100 pro-democracy supporters have been arrested under the law, and many others have fled into exile.





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