A consultant of Reporters Without Borders was denied entry to Hong Kong on Wednesday whereas trying to enter town on a fact-finding mission about shrinking press freedoms there, the group mentioned.
Aleksandra Bielakowska, a Taipei-based advocacy officer for the group, mentioned she had been detained for six hours at Hong Kong International Airport, the place she was questioned and her belongings searched a number of instances. She was later expelled with out rationalization.
Reporters Without Borders, which relies in Paris and advocates on behalf of journalists around the globe, mentioned it was the primary time one in all its representatives had been denied entry or held in Hong Kong.
“We are appalled by this unacceptable remedy of our colleague, who was merely attempting to do her job,” Rebecca Vincent, director of campaigns for Reporters Without Borders, mentioned in a press release.
The Hong Kong authorities mentioned it will not touch upon particular person instances, saying solely that its officers act in accordance with the regulation.
Ms. Bielakowska, a Polish nationwide, was touring with a colleague, the group’s Asia-Pacific bureau director, Cédric Alviani. Mr. Alviani was allowed to enter Hong Kong with out incident however returned to Taiwan in a while Monday.
The two had deliberate to fulfill with journalists and monitor the nationwide safety trial of a media government, Jimmy Lai, an ardent authorities critic and the proprietor of the now-shuttered Apple Daily newspaper. Ms. Bielakowska visited Hong Kong final December to attend the opening of Mr. Lai’s trial.
The episode comes lower than a month after Hong Kong launched new nationwide safety legal guidelines, recognized collectively as Article 23 laws, that partly goal international interference and heighten the dangers for journalists who report critically on the federal government.
The native laws was enacted 4 years after China imposed its personal nationwide safety regulation on Hong Kong following widespread pro-democracy protests, a measure that has stifled dissent and led to the closure of a number of unbiased media organizations.
Senior editors from a type of shops, Stand News, are on trial for publishing what the authorities have referred to as seditious materials. A verdict is anticipate later this month.
And final month, the U.S.-government funded information service Radio Free Asia introduced that it had closed its workplace in Hong Kong due to considerations in regards to the new Article 23 legal guidelines.
Tiffany May contributed reporting.