Hong Kong police on Thursday morning arrested the chief editor and four other senior executives of the pro-democracy Apple Daily newspaper under the national security law and were searching its offices, media reported.
Apple Daily is known for its strong pro-democracy stance and often criticises and condemns the Chinese and Hong Kong governments for tightening control over the city. The arrests and police search are the latest moves by Hong Kong authorities in a crackdown on dissent in the semi-autonomous Chinese city, following months of anti-government protests in 2019.
Apple Dailys chief editor Ryan Law, Next Digital CEO Cheung Kim-hung, the publishers chief operating officer and two other editors were arrested, according to Apple Daily, the South China Morning Post and other local media.
The government said security police had arrested five directors of a company for suspected contravention of the national security law.
The four men and one woman aged between 47 and 63 were arrested on suspicion of collusion with a foreign country or with external elements to endanger national security according to the statement, which did not name those arrested.
More than 200 police officers were involved in the search of Apple Dailys offices, and the government said a warrant was obtained to look for evidence of a suspected violation of the national security law.
When Hong Kong was handed over to China by the British in 1997, Beijing had promised that the territory that it could retain its freedoms not found on the mainland for 50 years. Critics now say that those freedoms are diminishing as China tightens its grip over the territory, following the implementation of a sweeping national security law which outlaws secession, subversion, terrorism and foreign collusion. The law has been used to arrest over a hundred pro-democracy figures since it was first implemented in June last year.
It is the second time that Hong Kongs police force have conducted an operation on Apple Daily, with police arresting founder Jimmy Lai and other executives last year on suspicion of national security law violations or fraud.
Lai is currently serving a 20-month prison sentence for his role in unauthorised assemblies in 2019, during a period when Hong Kong saw massive anti-government protests. Last month, authorities froze Lais assets and shares in Next Digital.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Federal staff and is auto-published from a syndicated feed.)