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Hong Kong Free Press

Hong Kong Free Press
Non-profit
Industry Online newspaper
Founded 29 June 2015
Headquarters Cyberport, Hong Kong
Website hongkongfp.com

Hong Kong Free Press (HKFP) is a free, non-profit online newspaper based in Hong Kong. It was founded by independent journalists in response to concerns over declining press freedom in the territory, to provide an alternative to the dominant English language news source, the South China Morning Post, and to provide quicker English coverage of local news.

Beginning in late 2015, access to the site from Mainland China was blocked by the Chinese authorities.

The under-provision of critical media motivated the founders to start an independent online news service in Hong Kong. Organisations such as Reporters Without Borders, the Committee to Protect Journalists, the Hong Kong Journalists Association and PEN America have all decried the state of press freedom in the city, which is often affected by self-censorship as publications avoid criticising Beijing in order to maintain advertising revenues. The South China Morning Post, long considered the city's English-language newspaper of record, has been accused of political self-censorship since the paper was purchased in 1993 by Robert Kuok's Kerry Group, which has extensive investments in Mainland China. Numerous senior staff have been purged from the Post since the 1990s, allegedly for political reasons. In 2014, four more prominent columnists were sacked by the Post, writers who were "sometimes critical of Beijing and Hong Kong", with some analysts suspecting involvement by the Liaison Office of the Central People's Government.

Newspapers and journalists have also increasingly been subject to physical attacks, including the firebombing of the home of publisher Jimmy Lai, an earlier offal attack on Lai, the firebombing of the Next Media headquarters, the chopping attack on former Ming Pao chief editor Kevin Lau, and assaults on various reporters by pro-government, anti-Umbrella Movement protesters in 2014. In October 2014, a group of pro-Beijing protesters physically blocked distribution of Apple Daily for nearly a week by obstructing the driveway of the printing facility.


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