FT journalist given seven days to leave Hong Kong

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Hong Kong: A leading Financial Times journalist has been given seven days to leave Hong Kong as a backlash mounted Monday against an unprecedented challenge to freedom of the press in the city.
Victor Mallet, the FT’s Asia news editor and a British national, angered authorities in Beijing and Hong Kong by hosting a speech at the city’s press club by Andy Chan, the leader of a tiny pro-independence political party.
Chan’s party has since been banned as Beijing cracks down on any pro-independence sentiment in the semi-autonomous city.
Last week it emerged Mallet’s application for a renewal of his work visa had been rejected by Hong Kong immigration authorities.
On Monday the FT said Mallet had only been granted a seven-day visitor visa after returning to the city from a trip on Sunday. Sources with direct knowledge of the situation told AFP that Mallet was questioned at immigration and was refused automatic entry. British citizens are usually allowed into Hong Kong without a visa and are permitted to stay for 180 days under immigration rules.
The FT said immigration officials had provided no explanation for the shortened visitor visa. “We continue to seek clarification from the Hong Kong authorities about the rejection of his work visa renewal,” said the paper, which has its regional headquarters in Hong Kong.
The FT’s editorial board had earlier described the decision to refuse Mallet a work visa as sending a “chilling message to everyone in Hong Kong” that highlighted the erosion of the basic rights and legal protections that had drawn international firms to base themselves in the city.
There are fears that a growing disregard for rights enshrined in the handover agreement will undermine the city’s standing as a business hub. The American Chamber of Commerce said any effort to curtail press freedom “could damage Hong Kong’s competitiveness as a leading financial and trading center”, describing a free press as a “core component” of the city’s success.
In a strident speech in August at the city’s Foreign Correspondents’ Club (FCC), where Mallet serves as vice president, independence activist Chan attacked China as an empire trying to “annex” and “destroy” Hong Kong.
China’s foreign ministry had asked the club to pull the talk, but the FCC refused. (AFP)

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