Hong Kong police arrest former Apple Daily editor under security law

Lam Man-chung was the editor who oversaw the final edition of the Beijing-critical daily in June after its top leadership was arrested and its assets frozen.

The Apple Daily headquarters at the printing house in Hong Kong, Thursday, June 17, 2021.
AP

The Apple Daily headquarters at the printing house in Hong Kong, Thursday, June 17, 2021.

A former senior editor of Hong Kong's shuttered Beijing-critical newspaper Apple Daily has been arrested by national security police.

A police source told AFP that former executive editor-in-chief Lam Man-chung had been detained on Wednesday morning.

In a statement, police said they had arrested a 51-year-old former newspaper editor for "collusion with foreign forces", a national security crime.

Lam is one of the several employees of Apple Daily arrested under a sweeping national security law that Beijing imposed on Hong Kong last year after huge and often violent democracy protests.

READ MORE: Hong Kong police arrest former Apple Daily journalist at airport

Apple Daily, an unapologetic backer of the protests, put out its last edition last month after its top editors and managers was arrested and its assets frozen under the security law.

Lam was the editor who oversaw that final edition, ending the paper's 26-year run.

Authorities said Apple Daily's reporting and editorials backed calls for international sanctions against China, a political stance that has been criminalised by the new security law.

The tabloid's owner Jimmy Lai, 73, is currently in prison and has been charged with collusion alongside two other executives who have been denied bail.

They face up to life in prison if convicted.

Among the others arrested, but currently not charged, are two of the paper's leading editorial writers, including one who was detained at Hong Kong's airport as he tried to leave the city.

The paper's sudden demise was a stark warning to all media outlets on the reach of a new national security law in a city that once billed itself as a beacon of press freedom in the region.

Last week the Hong Kong Journalists Association said media freedoms were "in tatters" as China remoulds the once outspoken business hub in its own authoritarian image.

READ MORE: Hong Kong arrests 117 people in first year of national security law

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