|
The First Art Newspaper on the Net |
|
Established in 1996 |
|
Friday, November 22, 2024 |
|
Hong Kong university scraps World Press Photo exhibit over 'safety' fears |
|
|
This undated photo shows AFP photographer Yasuyoshi Chiba, who won the World Press Photo of the Year and first prize in the General News-Singles category on April 16, 2020, posing in an unknown location. Shiggy Yoshida / AFP.
|
HONG KONG (AFP).- A Hong Kong university has scrapped an exhibition of World Press Photo winners just days ahead of its opening, citing "safety and security" fears.
The decision by Hong Kong Baptist University comes as Beijing and local authorities oversee a sweeping crackdown on dissent in the city.
World Press Photo is an annual competition that awards "the best visual journalism" around the world each year.
AFP photographer Yasuyoshi Chiba bagged last year's top prize with an image of a man in Sudan reciting poetry during anti-government protests.
The exhibition was also set to include prize-winning images of the huge and often violent pro-democracy protests that swept Hong Kong in 2019.
"After giving due consideration to campus safety and security, and the need to maintain pandemic control, Hong Kong Baptist University considers that it is not an appropriate time to hold the 'World Press Photo Exhibition 2020' on its campus," the university said in a brief statement.
It did not elaborate on what those safety fears were.
Robin Ewing, director of HKBU's International Journalism programme, said she was "disappointed that our students and the people of Hong Kong will not be able to see the exhibition in person".
"The decision was made at the top level of the university," she told AFP.
In a statement on its Facebook account, the organising committee of the World Press Photo Exhibition Hong Kong confirmed HKBU had pulled out three days before the exhibition's start.
"We regret it for Hong Kong and for everyone who helped to bring this project to life," the organisers said.
The statement did not say why HKBU had pulled out.
Media jitters
It is not the first time the World Press Photo has struggled to exhibit inside China.
Last October an annual exhibition in neighbouring Macau, which had run for more than a decade without incident, was suddenly shut down without explanation by authorities.
Both Hong Kong and Macau are former colonies that were granted certain freedoms unseen in the Chinese mainland when they returned to communist China's rule.
Those rights are disappearing under the central government's tightening grip.
Hong Kong has experienced particularly intense changes -- last year Beijing imposed a sweeping security law on the finance hub that outlawed much dissent.
Authorities said the law was needed to return stability.
Dozens of critics and democracy campaigners have since been arrested under the new law, including Jimmy Lai, the owner of the popular pro-democracy tabloid Apple Daily.
Hong Kong has long served as a vibrant media hub thanks to its business friendly environment, easy visa rules, independent judiciary and speech protections. Its universities also boast some of the best journalism schools in Asia.
But the city has steadily slid down annual press freedom ranking lists in recent years.
The security law has further compounded those concerns -- one article of the law specifically orders authorities to "strengthen management" of foreign media.
Chris Yeung, chairperson of the Hong Kong Journalists Association, said the exhibition's cancellation was "disappointing and worrying".
"(It) gives yet another sign of growing chilling effect of the national security law on freedoms in universities and society at large," Yeung told AFP.
Last year the New York Times announced it was relocating many of its staff from its Asia news hub in Hong Kong to South Korea because of the law and concerns about obtaining visas.
On the authoritarian Chinese mainland all local media is state controlled and heavily censored, while foreign journalists are routinely monitored, restricted, harassed and -- on occasions -- expelled for their reporting.
© Agence France-Presse
|
|
Today's News
February 27, 2021
A coming-out party for KAWS at the Brooklyn Museum
Pop art legend Ruby Mazur debuts new "Rock-n-Roll Last Supper" at top Hawaii gallery
Nelson-Atkins begins serial release of French paintings catalogue
"Guernica" tapestry long on view at UN, no longer is
Hauser & Wirth Somerset opens an online exhibition of works by Henry Taylor
Hong Kong university scraps World Press Photo exhibit over 'safety' fears
Hindman Auctions to present Springborn Collection of Contemporary Craft sale this March
Basilica of St Francis in Assisi opens its doors for a live virtual guided tour
Rajie Cook, who helped make sense of public spaces, dies at 90
History is present in "Future Retrieval: Close Parallel," making its debut at Cincinnati Art Museum
Jack Shainman Gallery opens an exhibition featuring a new body of work by Jackie Nickerson
Lincoln Center will head outside its closed theaters to perform
PinchukArtCentre opens a solo exhibition by Nikita Kadan "Stone Hits Stone"
ICA/Boston announces 2021 recipients of the James and Audrey Foster Prize
Machu Picchu to reopen again, at 40% capacity
Swiss orchestra's pandemic performances hit right note
Coventry City of Culture Trust puts diversity at the heart of governance with the appointment of new trustees
American evangelicals, Israeli settlers and a skeptical filmmaker
Sealed Pokémon Base Set Booster Box marks game's 25th anniversary at Heritage Auctions
Intuit reopens with a new exhibition on George Widener
From Easter Island, a pianist emerges
Tina Turner doc, lockdown films headline virtual Berlin fest
Overlooked no more: Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson, whose art chronicled Black life
What must a reputed online sportsbook comprise?
Top 5 Reasons Students Choose an Online Degree
Artistic Mindset: How to Develop Artistic Mindset
|
|
|
|
|
Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography, Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs, Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, . |
|
|
|
Royalville Communications, Inc produces:
|
|
|
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful
|
|