After arrests, HK's last major pro-democracy outlet shuts forever

Stand News on Wednesday announced on Facebook that it would immediately lay off all staff and cease operations

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Hong Kong Protesters | Hong Kong | media

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Hong Kong, Protests, Patrick Lam, Stand News
Stand News acting chief editor Patrick Lam, one of the seven people arrested “for conspiracy to publish seditious publication”, after 200 police personnel raided its office, in Hong Kong on Wednesday (Photo: Reuters)

Hong Kong’s biggest remaining pro-democracy news outlet closed after becoming the target of a national security investigation, capping a year of historic strokes by Beijing to silence dissent in the Asian financial center.

Stand News on Wednesday announced on Facebook that it would immediately lay off all staff and cease operations, and take down its website and social accounts within days. The move came hours after more than 200 police raided the outlet’s newsroom, froze some HK$61 million ($7.8 million) of assets and arrested seven people connected to it on a colonial-era sedition law. They included acting Editor-in-Chief Patrick Lam and Denise Ho, a pop star who had testified about before the U.S. Congress.

Stand News had briefly been the largest Chinese-language outlet publishing coverage critical of the government after Apple Daily’s closure in July under pressure from a similar probe. The site had braced for police scrutiny, announcing in June that it would purge opinion pieces from its site and stop accepting subscriptions and sponsorships.

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First Published: Thu, December 30 2021. 01:05 IST
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