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regular-article-logo Friday, 19 April 2024

'Appalled by biased reporting': Hong Kong govt criticises 'Economist'

The magazine did not immediately respond to a request for comment

Reuters Hong Kong Published 13.01.22, 02:21 AM
Hong Kong

Hong Kong Wikipedia

The Hong Kong government has criticised The Economist magazine over an article about the city’s recent Legislative Council election, saying it is “appalled by the biased reporting” and “baseless accusation that the polls were rigged”.

Candidates in the December 19 city assembly election were vetted so only “patriots” could stand. Pro-Beijing candidates swept to victory though turnout was a record low for a vote that came some 18 months after Beijing cracked down on a pro-democracy movement in the city with a new national security law.

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Critics described the election as undemocratic but authorities in the former British colony have repeatedly said it was “conducted in an open, fair and honest manner”.

Hong Kong’s second most senior official, John Lee, denounced what he said was a serious but baseless accusation by The Economist that the poll was rigged.

“If anything was ‘rigged’, it was the deliberately distorted image of Hong Kong that has been manipulated from the dark side of one’s personal internal bias,” Lee said in a letter dated January 11 and posted on a city government website.

The Economist did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The British magazine published an editorial on January 8 headlined “Pliant patriots” with a subheadline that said “Hong Kong’s new legislature has been sworn in. It is a mockery of democracy”.

Beijing imposed the national security in mid-2020 after months of at times violent pro-democracy protests.

Since then, more than 150 democracy activists, newspaper editors and journalists have been arrested and the clampdown on one of Asia’s most vibrant media hubs has sent a chill through the global financial centre. Critics of the legislation say it is being used to crush dissent but Hong Kong and Beijing authorities reject that.

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