‘Unreasonable’ tax audit of some Hong Kong media: Press union

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Ms Selina Cheng, the HKJA’s chair, said the association, herself and her parents were also impacted.

Hong Kong Journalists Association chairwoman Selina Cheng said the association, herself and her parents were also impacted.

PHOTO: AFP

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At least five local media outlets in Hong Kong and multiple journalists had their taxes from years ago audited on “unreasonable grounds”, a press association said on May 21.

Hong Kong’s press freedom ranking has plummeted since Beijing cracked down on dissent after huge, sometimes violent

pro-democracy protests in 2019

.

The Hong Kong tax authorities alleged that a group of online outlets, reporters and some of their family members had failed to report their income from 2017 to 2019 in full.

Backdated demands have been issued as a result, according to the Hong Kong Journalists Association (HKJA).

The association told reporters that it believed the audits “were not based on sufficient evidence or reasonable grounds”.

The impacted media outlets listed by the HKJA include Hong Kong Free Press, Inmedia and The Witness – a news site focused on covering court cases – as well as two others.

HKJA said the tax department had claimed back money for “bizarre” reasons, including calculating non-existent income from before one of the outlets was founded.

Ms Selina Cheng, the HKJA’s chairwoman and a former Wall Street Journal reporter, said the association, herself and her parents were also impacted.

Hong Kong’s Inland Revenue Department (IRD) said it followed the legal process and that its actions were not aimed at specific industries, according to local media. IRD added that it would not comment on “individual cases”.

Hong Kong journalists rated the city’s press freedom lower than ever in an annual survey in 2024, citing fears around sweeping national security laws.

More than 90 per cent of journalists surveyed said the city’s press freedom was “significantly” impacted by a

domestic security law enacted in March 2024

that punishes crimes such as espionage and foreign interference.

Colloquially known as Article 23, it was the second such law enacted for the financial hub, following one imposed by Beijing in 2020 after the pro-democracy protests.

China’s Foreign Ministry said Hong Kong’s security laws “target a very small number of individuals who severely endanger national security, not law-abiding media reporters”. AFP

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