Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Fraser-Smith, a former book-keeper with the Hong Kong and Whampoa Dock Company, was known for his "fearlessness in expression of his views in print". The Chinese name of The Hongkong Telegraph is based on Fraser-Smith's name. [2] As editor of the paper, Fraser-Smith was charged numerous times with libel.
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; ... Print/export Download as PDF ... {Newspapers and news websites in Hong Kong ...
Sing Tao Daily is the oldest Chinese language daily newspaper in Hong Kong, having commenced publication on 1 August 1938. [ 3 ] The first overseas edition of the paper was launched in 1963 in San Francisco, where the group’s first overseas office was set up in May 1964.
The Chinese language newspapers Headline Daily and Oriental Daily News have the highest shares in the Hong Kong newspaper market, while the Hong Kong Economic Times is the best-selling financial newspaper. The Standard, a free tabloid with a mass market strategy, is the most widely circulated English newspaper by a significant margin.
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; ... Print/export Download as PDF ... Pages in category "English-language newspapers published in Hong Kong"
The newspaper became independent from the China Mail in 1919. [6] Chinese Mail provided news on Guangzhou due to the close proximity of Guangzhou to Hong Kong. Due to its location in Hong Kong, too, it was free from censorship from Guangzhou. [7] In 1941, when the Imperial Japanese Army captured Hong Kong, the newspaper stopped publication. [6]
Hong Kong police charged two top editors and two editorial writers at Apple Daily with collusion weeks after the city's largest pro-democracy newspaper was forced to cease publication and its ...
Sing Pao Daily News (Chinese: 成報) is one of the oldest Chinese newspapers in Hong Kong, first published on 1 May 1939 by the Sing Pao Newspaper Company Limited (成報報刊有限公司) under Ho Man-fat. [1] It was initially published every three days, later becoming a daily. By the 1950s, Sing Pao accounted for almost half of the market. [2]