Hong Kong press freedom sinks to record low: Journalist survey
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More than 90 per cent of the surveyed journalists said the city’s press freedom had been “significantly” impacted by a new security law enacted in March.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
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HONG KONG - Hong Kong journalists rated the city’s press freedom lower than ever in an annual survey released on Aug 20, citing fears of sweeping national security laws.
Published every year since 2013 by the Hong Kong Journalists Association (HKJA) and the Hong Kong Public Opinion Research Institute (HKPORI), the Press Freedom Index ranks the city’s media environment on a zero to 100 scale – 100 being a perfect score.
It is based on a poll of more than 250 working journalists and around 1,000 members of the public.
The rating in 2024 among journalists dropped to a record low of 25, down 0.7 point from 2023 and 17 points from the survey’s launch.
More than 90 per cent of the surveyed journalists said the city’s press freedom had been “significantly” impacted by a new security law enacted in March,
Colloquially known as Article 23, it was the second such law enacted in the financial hub, following one imposed by Beijing in 2020
Ninety-four per cent of journalists also cited the prosecution of media tycoon Jimmy Lai
Other concerns included the disappearance of South China Morning Post reporter Minnie Chan in Beijing.
HKJA had previously released a statement saying it was “very concerned” about Ms Chan, an award-winning journalist, who has been unreachable since attending a security forum in Beijing in 2023.
For the public, the overall rating was 42.2 – largely stable after the last major drop from 45 in 2018 to 41.9 in 2019.
“This discrepancy may be explained by the relatively less heated discussion around Article 23 compared to the 2020 National Security Law,” HKJA said in a statement.
However, journalists are “more cognisant of potentially running afoul of the new crimes created by Article 23 when reporting”.
China’s foreign ministry said on Aug 20 that Hong Kong’s security laws “target a very small number of individuals who severely endanger national security, not law-abiding media reporters”.
Since the laws’ implementation, “press freedom in Hong Kong has been better protected under a safe and stable environment in accordance with the law”, spokeswoman Mao Ning said at a regular press briefing.
The index’s publication came weeks after HKJA’s newly elected chairwoman Selina Cheng was fired by The Wall Street Journal
The Journal’s parent company Dow Jones declined to comment on Ms Cheng’s case, but said at the time that it “continues to be a fierce and vocal advocate for press freedom”. AFP

