“Ming Pao switches editors”的版本间的差异
来自China Digital Space
小 (文本替换 - 替换“Category”为“分类”) |
|||
(未显示2个用户的6个中间版本) | |||
第5行: | 第5行: | ||
[http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/31/world/asia/hong-kong-paper-ousts-top-editor-stirring-concern.html Lawyer and former Ming Pao writer Margaret Ng told the New York Times that “If Ming Pao goes down, it does mean that the lights go out.”] [http://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/article/1425478/new-editor-join-ming-pao-just-dont-call-him-chief Lau was replaced by Chong Tien-siong, a Malaysian newspaper editor] who has [http://cpj.org/blog/2014/01/staff-of-hong-kongs-ming-pao-fights-leadership-cha.php supported compulsory “patriotic education” in Hong Kong schools]. Patriotic education was successfully blocked by summer-long protests and the threat of a teachers’ strike in 2012. | [http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/31/world/asia/hong-kong-paper-ousts-top-editor-stirring-concern.html Lawyer and former Ming Pao writer Margaret Ng told the New York Times that “If Ming Pao goes down, it does mean that the lights go out.”] [http://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/article/1425478/new-editor-join-ming-pao-just-dont-call-him-chief Lau was replaced by Chong Tien-siong, a Malaysian newspaper editor] who has [http://cpj.org/blog/2014/01/staff-of-hong-kongs-ming-pao-fights-leadership-cha.php supported compulsory “patriotic education” in Hong Kong schools]. Patriotic education was successfully blocked by summer-long protests and the threat of a teachers’ strike in 2012. | ||
− | + | See also [[attack on Kevin Lau]]. | |
中文资料:[[明报换总编]] | 中文资料:[[明报换总编]] | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
Return to the [[2014|2014 yearbook]] or to [[other resources]]. | Return to the [[2014|2014 yearbook]] or to [[other resources]]. | ||
− | [[ | + | [[分类:yearbooks]][[分类:2014]] |
2023年8月7日 (一) 05:01的最新版本
Hong Kong’s premier Chinese-language newspaper Ming Pao (明报) was shaken by the reassignment of its chief editor, Kevin Lau Chun-to (刘进图) in early January 2014. Protesters and Ming Pao staff are concerned that the sudden signals Beijing’s encroachment on the city’s independent reportage.
Lau was brutally stabbed on February 27 in what police sources have referred to as a “classic triad hit… designed to send a warning.”
Lawyer and former Ming Pao writer Margaret Ng told the New York Times that “If Ming Pao goes down, it does mean that the lights go out.” Lau was replaced by Chong Tien-siong, a Malaysian newspaper editor who has supported compulsory “patriotic education” in Hong Kong schools. Patriotic education was successfully blocked by summer-long protests and the threat of a teachers’ strike in 2012.
See also attack on Kevin Lau.
中文资料:明报换总编
Return to the 2014 yearbook or to other resources.