Award Winning  Hong  Kong Journalist Found Guilty Of Deceptively Obtaining Data For Documentary

Award Winning Hong Kong Journalist Found Guilty Of Deceptively Obtaining Data For Documentary

By Martin Cole-

 A Hong Kong court has found a journalist guilty on Thursday of making false statements to obtain data for a documentary on the police handling of a mob attack on pro-democracy protesters, reporters and bystanders in 2019.

The ruling  today at West Kowloon Court, sparked an outcry from journalist groups concerned about shrinking press freedoms at a time when the government is tightening access to public records.

The case attracted  concern over a crackdown on press freedom in the Chinese-ruled city, which has become increasingly dictatorial, after a sweeping national security law imposed last year.

Bao Choy, 37, an award-winning freelance producer with public broadcaster RTHK, was arrested last year over vehicle registrations she had used for her investigation.

“The regulations are not intended to allow the public to obtain vehicle particulars without limitations,” said the judge, Ivy Chui, who ordered Choy to pay a fine of HK$6,000 ($773) for violating a road traffic ordinance.

“The goal was to find the car owner’s name and address for an interview,” ruled Chui, a judge of the West Kowloon magistrates’ court in the Asian financial hub. “Interviewing and reporting are not related to traffic and transport purposes.”

Choy had pleaded not guilty. Supporters outside the court held banners reading “Journalism is not a crime” and “Without fear or favor.”

“The court can find me guilty but I don’t think I am,” a tearful Choy told reporters after the trial. “I don’t think doing investigative reporting is a crime… I won’t give up my pursuit of journalism because of this case.”

Shame

Hong Kong Journalists Association chief Chris Yeung, standing next to her, described the ruling as “a day of shame” for the city, adding that criminalizing normal journalism work was “recklessly destroying” press freedom.

The July 2019 attack in the northern Yuen Long district, where more than 100 men in white T-shirts hit people with sticks and poles at a train station, struck a particularly sensitive nerve with many in Hong Kong.

Police have made 63 arrests over the attack, charging eight of the mob, according to reports.

Seven others present on the night in question, including former democratic lawmaker Lam Cheuk-ting,  were also charged with rioting. Lam was hospitalized after being wounded as he livestreamed the attack.

Officers were severely criticized for what pro-democracy activists and rights groups called a slack response, with some accusing them of colluding with triad gangsters.

Police have rejected the claims, blaming the slow response partly on protests elsewhere in the former British colony that had drained resources.

RTHK obtained data on the ownership of some cars seen in video footage on the night, in a bid to trace those behind the assault and highlight the alleged slow response of police.

The “7.21 Who Owns the Truth” investigation won Hong Kong’s Kam Yiu-yu Press Freedom Award on Wednesday, RTHK said, citing a panel member as saying, “The report raised important leads that the people in power refused to respond to.”

The government has rejected criticism that Choy’s arrest, and an overhaul of RTHK led by a bureaucrat with no media experience, represented a crackdown on press freedom.

Hong Kong’s police commissioner, Chris Tang, is among those who have called for laws against “fake news.”

Reporters Without Borders ranks Hong Kong 80th among 180 countries in terms of press freedom, in freefall over the past decade.

 

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