Nordic papers denounce attacks on Hong Kong media

Apple Daily employees work in the printing room as the last edition of the newspaper is printed in Hong Kong early on June 24, 2021. The 26-year-old tabloid announced closure the previous day after having its assets frozen by the police.
AFP/Anthony Wallace

OSLO, Norway — The four largest Nordic newspapers marked the centenary of the Chinese Communist Party's founding on Thursday with a joint front-page editorial denouncing the regime's attacks on  Hong Kong's independent media.

"Enough is enough," the open letter to the People's Republic of China said, adding that "The world can no longer stand idly by as China gradually sucks the air out of freedom of the press in Hong Kong."

Writing in Norway's Aftenposten, Sweden's Dagens Nyheter, Helsingin Sanomat in Finland and Politiken in Denmark, the editors in chief promised to "open our newspapers to an even more intensive coverage of the frightening developments in Hong Kong."

In June the Hong Kong pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily was forced to close after its assets were frozen under the National Security Law and some of its executives were arrested for a series of articles published there.

While Hong Kong's leaders have made repeated speeches over the past year assuring that freedoms remain guaranteed, the expression of certain political views is a crime under the draconian law, punishable by life imprisonment.

"We watch with growing concern as our profession –- free, independent, and critical journalism –- is criminalised," the open letter said.

Before the closure of Apple Daily, the regime placed Radio Television Hong Kong under the control of the authorities and gave the police new internet censorship powers, the editorial said.

The Nordic countries, which regularly top the Reporters Without Borders world press-freedom rankings, have had several recent run-ins with China. 

Diplomatic relations with Norway were frozen for six years after the Nobel committee -- independent of the country's government -- awarded the 2010 Peace Prize to the late imprisoned Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo.

Tensions also arose between China and Sweden over the fate of the Chinese-Swedish publisher Gui Minhai, currently imprisoned in China on a ten-year sentence for "illegally providing intelligence overseas".

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