Monday, April 30, 2007

Background & Why save RTHK?


We don't want a new organization with no track record, and controlled by people chosen by Donald Tsang.

Some Background

1. The government appointed a group to study the future of public broadcasting in Hong Kong.

2. The Board concluded that a new public broadcaster is needed, and it will not be RTHK.

What's the Problem with that?

1. The new proposed public braodcaster will have a board with members all appointed by Donald Tsang.

2. RTHK has 79 years of history, described by Reuters news service as "arguably the most liberal and critical public broadcaster operating on Chinese soil today."

3. Because RTHK is not a commercial enterprise, it is one of the few organizations that will criticize the Chinese government, and will for example, report on gay & lesbian issues.

4. There's no reason to trust the new organization proposed by the government, that will essentially still be controlled by the Government.

Read More...

背景&為何拯救香港電台

--我們不要一所由曾蔭權委任, 毫無往績的新機構.

背景

1. 政府早前成立了一個委員會檢討香港公共廣播服務.
2. 這委員會在報告中指出香港需要一所新的公共廣播機構, 但並非由香港電台過渡而成.

報告問題所在
1. 新建議的公共廣播機構的董事局將全部由曾蔭權委任.
2. 香港電台有 79 年歷史, 路透社新聞部更評它為中國至今最開放最具批判性的公共廣播機構
3. 由於香港電台並非一所商營機構, 它是少數願意批判中央政府, 或討論一些敏感話題,如同性戀等的傳媒機構。
4. 我們並無理由相信一個由政府委任的,沒有往績的,新公共廣播機構.

Read More...

Saturday, April 21, 2007

RTHK Staff Protest--Click for More

Read More...

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

South China Morning Post Article by Frank Ching

Editorial | Observer | By FRANK CHING
Sending the wrong signal on RTHK
2007-04-10

When the government last year appointed a panel to look into public service broadcasting, there was strong speculation that its real purpose was to bring RTHK to heel and turn it into a government mouthpiece. Defenders of RTHK - and there were many - demanded loudly that the government continue to honour the broadcaster's editorial independence.

The panel's chairman, Raymond Roy Wong, was taken aback by the vociferousness of the demands. He assured all and sundry that the committee would respect freedom of the press, and that it had no intention of weakening or dismembering RTHK. During the year-long discussion, the public assumed that the committee was going to come up with a way to end RTHK 's status as a government department and turn it into a genuine public service broadcaster.

It came as a great surprise, therefore, when the committee's report recommended the creation from scratch of a body that would have nothing at all to do with RTHK - except to take over all its functions as a public service broadcaster. What would become of RTHK? The committee's report does not spell it out in so many words, but the impression is inescapable: RTHK's intended fate is to become a government mouthpiece.

The committee's report said, any proposal to modify RTHK into a public broadcaster [would pre-empt the government's] decision on what role it may assign to RTHK, as a government department; and that falls outside the committee's terms of reference. This is very strange. Many groups and individuals called for precisely such a proposal. Yet the committee did not see fit to declare that it could produce no such thing.

The committee was set up to recommend an appropriate arrangement for the provision of public service broadcasting in Hong Kong. So its members would apparently have been perfectly within their remit to propose that the main public service broadcaster, RTHK, should be transformed into the new broadcasting entity.

If this was not an option from day one, why did the committee not make that clear? Why string the public along when the committee had no intention of considering any such proposals? Why not say immediately that its terms of reference precluded it from doing so? The committee says it did not want to pre-empt any government decision on what role to assign to RTHK. And yet, in its report, it does exactly that: there is a whole section entitled, The role of RTHK.

The report, in fact, proposes that RTHK be stripped of all its public broadcasting functions. It then speaks of the reduced role of RTHK. Presumably, that role is serving as the government's mouthpiece.

No one needed the committee to come up with abstract principles of what a public broadcaster should be. What was needed was a practical solution to the current problem, which was RTHK's ambiguous status. There has been much talk in recent months about the importance of collective memory. RTHK has been broadcasting since the 1920s, and generations of Hongkongers grew up with it.

It is an indelible part of the city's collective memory. It would be sacrilegious to dismember RTHK and turn it into a government mouthpiece.
Despite the committee's proposals, this does not have to happen.

After studying the report, the government will issue a consultation paper. The final decision, therefore, should lie in the hands of the public. There is no reason why the consultation paper couldn't propose, as one option, transforming RTHK from a government department into an independent entity - Hong Kong's public broadcaster.

This is an option with a great deal of public support. If the government omits it from the consultation paper, the consultation will be seen as an exercise in which the government has already decided the outcome.

Frank Ching is a Hong Kong-based writer and commentator. frank.ching@scmp.com

Copyright (c) 2007. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

Read More...