Further erosion of press freedom in Hong Kong
The city’s Office for Safeguarding National Security summoned international news organizations to a rare meeting on Dec 6 to warn them against “false information and smear campaigns” surrounding the city’s deadliest fire in nearly eight decades and upcoming legislative elections.
The OSNS said some recent reports by foreign media have “disregarded facts, spread false information” and “incited social division and confrontation.” An official at the meeting said “勿謂言之不預” (don’t say you have not been warned). No specific examples were provided.
The meeting came about a week and a half after the deadly blaze at a Hong Kong housing estate triggered a level of public anger unseen in the city since Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law in 2020. Hong Kong is holding legislative elections on Dec 7 that will be closely watched for turnout. Participation fell to a record 30.2% in the 2021 race.
Hong Kong Chief Executive John Lee, who pledged to launch an independent committee over the fire that killed at least 159 people, has said he decided to proceed with the vote as scheduled to “safeguard social stability.”
The city observed three days of mourning and temporarily suspended election campaigns after the blaze, which drew international headlines and prompted Xi Jinping to order officials to prioritize rescue efforts.
Hong Kong ranked 140 out of 180 in the Reporters Without Borders 2025 press freedom index report. That’s down from 73 in 2019, the year that months of pro-democracy protests prompted Beijing to tighten its grip on the city. Once among the most freewheeling places in Asia for journalism, Hong Kong’s media landscape has changed significantly since the national security legislation came into effect and authorities cracked down on outlets including Jimmy Lai’s Apple Daily.
The Office for Safeguarding National Security was established in 2020 as part of the national security law, and reports directly to authorities on mainland China. Dong Jingwei, the office’s current head, was formerly a top official in Ministry of State Security.
https://bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-12-06/hong-kong-summons-international-news-outlets-for-rare-warning?utm_source=website&utm_medium=share&utm_campaign=twitter&embedded-checkout=true…https://hongkongfp.com/2025/12/06/dont-say-we-didnt-warn-you-chinas-nat-sec-office-in-hong-kong-summons-international-media/…https://osns.gov.cn/20251206/d8a2a89bb919434cbd71490dcf6ea9d4/c.html…
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Byron Wan
@Byron_Wan
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In line with the CCP’s playbook, Hong Kong authorities are aggressively doing everything they can to chill speech related to the fire that had killed 159 so far, and Secretary for Security Chris Tang has just slammed this very WSJ editorial.
A couple of social media