" V/ G% v/ m# Y8 X9 g1 E* y1 G, J* u. @# u- x+ c The Economist: Tamed hounds ! a! W! E* t ^* Z 8 x p6 Z0 n2 ~+ Q/ _9 ^$ n % x) u: U; k* d2 dTVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。The press in Hong Kong, though still free, has lost its bite# t' M1 H; ]6 n5 p/ E2 }
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LEUNG CHUN-YING, Hong Kong’s chief executive, left out a few things in his latest report to his bosses in Beijing.On July 15th he told China’s national legislature how he believes the Hong Kong public wants to choose its leader in 2017, when a popular election is to be held under conditions controlled by Beijing.www2.tvboxnow.com* r5 L) v. G L
9 J* G1 e) H7 Q1 a3 ~* Z; \6 U' }In his report, Mr Leung claimed that the“mainstream” view in Hong Kong is that the candidates should be nominated only by a select committee, which happens to be what authorities in Beijing want too, to make absolutely sure the winner is someone they like. He failed to mention that on July 1st hundreds of thousands of people had marched for broader democratic rights, or that more than 700,000of Hong Kong’s citizens have just voted in an unofficial referendum for a more open nominating process.www2.tvboxnow.com1 b6 a" e4 k7 e5 o" N
6 q1 j7 u+ }0 T8 \( O/ p- xSome called the report a sham, and in another era lively local media would have relished slamming it as such. But the press in Hong Kong, despite still being far freer than its counterparts on the mainland, has lost much of its punch. The Hong Kong Journalists Association (HKJA) said in a report this month that the past year had been “the darkest for press freedom” in several decades. Under “one country, two systems”, the formula used to govern the territory after the handover, Hong Kong was assured that its press would retain its former freedoms. However, it has been tamed in more subtle ways: ownership has shifted to pro-Beijing tycoons, and advertising has been used to exert pressure—as have violence and intimidation. According to a survey by the HKJA of 663 local journalists in 2012, 79% believed that self-censorship had risen since 2005, and 36% said that they or their supervisors practised it. 2 i; ?$ J1 |7 |" d/ }& Lwww2.tvboxnow.comTVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。. v. t, y4 `! {( s1 I
Much of the coverage of Mr Leung’s report, while citing criticism from pro-democracy factions, was also scrupulously neutral in tone. On July 16th Ming Pao, usually one of the more robust Chinese-language newspapers, noted in its headline and lead paragraph of the story that Mr Leung’s report did not “directly” rule out the possibility of a broader public nomination of candidates for chief executives.This had the effect of playing down the report’s pro-Beijing thrust. The coverage could not be called biased, because it reported the reactions of all sides, but neither could it be called bold. 7 W( y( O0 d Q! g- _TVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。/ p1 W6 v$ s" j6 ^/ V$ G0 c
One exception is Apple Daily, a lively tabloid accused by critics of being a tool of radical activists. On July 16thit published a front-page condemnation of Mr Leung’s report as “fake consultation” with citizens, and relayed an exhortation that the people “not stop fighting” for real democracy.公仔箱論壇1 E9 u9 b7 ~3 X4 X+ N
4 I/ o! B% J/ | ?- ytvb now,tvbnow,bttvbApple Daily does not have to worry about losing big advertisers for its strident tone. It has already lost them. Last autumn three banks—HSBC, Hang Seng and Standard Chartered—ceased advertising with the newspaper(several big property developers stopped in 2003, another tense moment in relations with Beijing). Mark Simon, an executive with Apple Daily's media group, says the banks told him that the central government’s liaison office in Hong Kong had called for this. (The liaison office has denied it and the banks have said their decisions were commercially based.)+ S" K& O1 z& d7 `: c
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Other media outlets in Hong Kong do hit local officials hard at times. Occasionally they rile the Chinese government too. In2013 a cameraman from TVB, a television channel sometimes derided as “CCTVB”(after China Central Television, China’s state broadcaster) for its supine editorial line, showed unusual courage. With another cameraman, he accompanied an activist on an attempted visit to the home in Beijing of Liu Xia, the wife of an imprisoned Nobel laureate, Liu Xiaobo. The cameramen were beaten up at the scene. 0 e; `6 \: o' j$ A0 c6 Z& c8 Y$ `# o& ]* `+ v b- Z
Not like it used to be ; K' P! r/ s0 H公仔箱論壇TVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。! y1 [$ b( O7 ?- Y% \
But in the past two years several news organisations have experienced management shake-ups and worrying episodes of intimidation. The South China Morning Post, Hong Kong’s leading English-language newspaper, has recently installed a number of senior editors who have worked at mainland newspapers or agencies. Frustrated journalists at the paper tell of stories that are critical of China often being toned down or dropped altogether. In February Commercial Radio axed Li Wei-ling, a talk-show host who frequently takes the government to task; she accused her employer of bowing to government pressure in exchange for the renewal of its licence. In January Kevin Lau, Ming Pao’s chief editor, was removed, to the shock and anger of many of the paper’s reporters. Then, on February 26th, Mr Lau was nearly killed in a knife attack. . T$ F0 q: p; t* j8 |- @5 ZTVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。* g4 P; k0 v6 d9 \1 O7 N% K) q
The motives for the attack on Mr Lau remain unclear, but its method, used by triad gangs, has become familiar to Hong Kong’s journalists. In 2013 two men with batons beat a magazine publisher. In another incident two attackers smashed the car window of the publisher of a free newspaper. He sped to safety but says he has since lost advertisers. In June 2013 a stolen car crashed into a gate outside the home of Jimmy Lai, Apple Daily’s owner. A machete and a hatchet were left behind. 1 q) k+ R" I. \; `' D7 o4 B 4 v" M* u. h$ _5 r6 S5 |The effect longer-term of such tactics is unclear. Many residents have taken to the streets, and they may do so again.Perhaps more importantly, they have also taken to the internet, which is uncensored in Hong Kong. A younger generation, which reads fewer newspapers, uses social media to vent its frustrations and to organise collective action. Journalists have migrated online, too, setting up news websites such as the House News. The traditional press may now be docile,but that does not mean ordinary people are.公仔箱論壇# U# r2 X5 E0 I s
tvb now,tvbnow,bttvb F, L; ?# ]; _2 _$ e" T 作者: felicity2010 時間: 2014-7-18 10:00 PM
被斬傷後首回《明報》 劉進圖:恍如隔世tvb now,tvbnow,bttvb( c$ i: K* G0 p- X
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2 L; g& p- X- X* a3 pTVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。明報員工關注組Facebook圖片tvb now,tvbnow,bttvb' |) T" {' {/ R3 C: I" s" D6 O
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被人伏擊身中多刀的《明報》前總編輯劉進圖,住院近5個月後,今天第一次回到位於柴灣的《明報》辦公大樓,表示感覺「恍如隔世」,又指自己住院像「與世隔絕數個月」。www2.tvboxnow.com! u# i/ Y3 V0 V$ ?# N% N
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劉進圖的腳部神經線被斬斷,經手術駁回,在本周二出院回家,但仍需繼續做物理治療,復元過程漫長。《明報新聞網》形容,他今天下午2時許回到明報編輯部,腳上仍然套住腳套,左手拿着拐仗,雖然有點消瘦,但精神不錯。公仔箱論壇0 L$ J E: ~: K" |' N
0 G+ |, R1 @+ C) M! a# u6 |6 Iwww2.tvboxnow.com劉進圖說,今天回來《明報》辦公室,主要是和同事討論有關教育圖書的事務,亦看看自己的辦公室安排,他期望8月能恢復上班,每天工作半畫,因上午需要到醫院做物理治療。 3 r; s0 g' `3 U9 C+ k4 ]公仔箱論壇 8 [/ J. t- V6 \4 x" w2 U「明報員工關注組」今天在Facebook專頁,貼出劉進圖返回辦公室的照片,並表示:6 i2 k- n3 p2 P x
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謝謝您今天回來探望我們,www2.tvboxnow.com4 I0 Z4 m0 M8 ~: F+ \
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回來跟我們並肩作戰! 8 h3 x7 T: [* D: C' tTVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。