Search results
Results from the Tech24 Deals Content Network
Apple Daily is described to have introduced tabloid journalism to the Hong Kong market. [41] The focus on large colourful graphics and more flamboyant stories, such as celebrity scandals, racist targeting of mainland immigrants, traffic accidents and deaths, quickly made Apple Daily Hong Kong's second most popular newspaper. [42]
Apple Daily raids and arrests. / 22.2861116; 114.2740238. The offices of Apple Daily, once the largest anti-China newspaper in Hong Kong, and its parent company, Next Digital, were raided and executives arrested by the Hong Kong Police Force on 10 August 2020 and again on 17 June 2021. Some of the arrested and three companies of Next Digital ...
Five hundred Hong Kong police officers raided the offices of pro-democracy tabloid Apple Daily on Thursday. Five of the outlet’s top executives were arrested, its accounts were frozen, and the ...
Apple Daily – Formerly one of Hong Kong's largest circulation newspapers, which was published daily between 1995 and 2021. Next Magazine – Published on Wednesday evenings, one of Hong Kong's largest circulation news and entertainment magazines between 1990 and 2021. Easy Finder – A teen-focused entertainment magazine.
US President Joe Biden lamented the closure of Hong Kong's Apple Daily newspaper on Thursday, putting the blame squarely on Beijing and calling for the release of the tabloid's detained ...
A senior journalist at Hong Kong’s recently shuttered pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily has been arrested at the airport attempting to leave the city, according to local reports. Editorial ...
This was the moment 500 officers raided Hong Kong's Apple Daily, a beacon of media freedoms on the margins of Communist China.[Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam, saying:] "Don't try to beautify these ...
Ronson Chan waves to reporters during his visit to Stand News after the raids. At 6 a.m., on 29 December 2021, the National Security Department of the Hong Kong Police Force arrested six senior staff members of Stand News, including the former editor-in-chief Chung Pui-kuen, former legislator Margaret Ng, singer and activist Denise Ho, Chow Tat-chi and Christine Fang, accusing them of ...