Hong Kong journalist granted bail, trip for fellowship

Sep 21, 2022, 3:14 PM | Updated: Sep 22, 2022, 3:15 am

FILE - Senior editor of "Stand News" Ronson Chan, center, is arrested by police officers in Hong Ko...

FILE - Senior editor of "Stand News" Ronson Chan, center, is arrested by police officers in Hong Kong on Dec. 29, 2021. Chan was granted bail Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 and allowed to leave the city for an overseas fellowship two weeks after he was arrested for allegedly obstructing police officers while reporting. (AP Photo, File)

(AP Photo, File)


              FILE - Senior editor of Stand News Ronson Chan, speaks outside his office after released from police station in Hong Kong on Dec. 29, 2021. Chan was granted bail Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 and allowed to leave the city for an overseas fellowship two weeks after he was arrested for allegedly obstructing police officers while reporting. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu, File)
            
              FILE - Senior editor of "Stand News" Ronson Chan, center, is arrested by police officers in Hong Kong on Dec. 29, 2021. Chan was granted bail Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 and allowed to leave the city for an overseas fellowship two weeks after he was arrested for allegedly obstructing police officers while reporting. (AP Photo, File)

HONG KONG (AP) — The head of Hong Kong’s largest journalist group was granted bail Thursday and allowed to leave the city for an overseas fellowship two weeks after he was arrested for allegedly obstructing police officers while reporting.

Ronson Chan, who chairs the Hong Kong Journalists Association, pleaded not guilty to two counts of obstructing the police. A conviction could mean up to two years in jail.

Chan was allowed to post bail and leave Hong Kong for a fellowship program at the University of Oxford later this month on the condition that he keeps the Hong Kong police updated on his address and mobile number while in Britain.

He was arrested while reporting on a homeowners’ meeting in the Mong Kok district earlier this month with a colleague.

Police said that the two were behaving in a suspicious manner and were requested to produce proof of identity. Chan was arrested after he was uncooperative and refused to show his identity card.

His arrest prompted concern from the city’s Foreign Correspondents’ Club, which said it “supports journalists’ right to cover stories without fear of harassment and arrest.” The club also called on authorities to exercise “transparency and care” in handling the case.

When asked Thursday outside the court about his thoughts on press freedom in Hong Kong, Chan said he was not able to discuss details of the case, but said that “everyone in Hong Kong, if you try to observe what is happening, then you can get the answer.”

Hong Kong, once a bastion of press freedom in Asia, has since seen its press freedoms decline after a tough national security law aimed at stamping out dissent was imposed on the city. Media outlets critical of the government, such as the now-defunct Apple Daily and Stand News, shut down after police raided their offices and arrested executives and journalists.

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Hong Kong journalist granted bail, trip for fellowship