Hong Kong's mass media
at the end of 2005 included 49 daily newspapers,
a number of electronic newspapers, 722
periodicals, two domestic free television
programme service licensees, three domestic
pay television programme service licensees,
13 non-domestic television programme service
licensees, one government-funded public
service broadcaster, and two sound broadcasting
licensees.
The availability of
the latest telecommunications technology
and keen interest in Hong Kong's affairs
have attracted many international news
agencies, newspapers with international
readership and overseas broadcasting corporations
to establish regional headquarters or
representative offices here. The successful
regional publications produced in Hong
Kong underline its important position
as a financial, industrial, trading and
communications centre.
The Press
The Hong Kong press
registered at year-end included 23 Chinese-language
dailies, 13 English-language dailies (one
of them in Braille and one in Internet
edition), eight bilingual dailies and
five in Japanese. Of the Chinese-language
dailies, 17 cover mainly local and overseas
general news; four specialise in finance;
and the rest cover horse racing. The larger
papers include overseas Chinese communities
in their distribution networks, and some
have editions printed outside Hong Kong,
in particular in the United States, Canada,
the United Kingdom and Australia.
One of the English dailies
publishes a daily Braille edition, in
conjunction with the Hong Kong Society
for the Blind, and also an Internet edition.
Three Chinese dailies and four bilingual
dailies are published on the Internet.
Hong Kong is the base for a number of
regional publications such as the Far
Eastern Economic Review and business
and trade magazines. The Financial
Times, The Wall Street Journal Asia, USA
Today, International Herald Tribune and
The Nihon Keizai Shimbun are printed
in Hong Kong.
Several organisations
represent people working in the news media
in Hong Kong. The Newspaper Society of
Hong Kong represents Chinese and English
newspaper proprietors. It is empowered
to act in matters that affect the interests
of its members. The Hong Kong Journalists
Association is the biggest industry-wide
union of journalists in the HKSAR and
one of the most active. Formed in 1968,
it has around more than 400 members and
promotes the right to freedom of expression.
It focuses its attention on a range of
press freedom and ethics concerns as well
as on professional training. Among media
organisations formed more recently are
the Hong Kong News Executives' Association,
the Hong Kong Federation of Journalists,
and the Hong Kong Press Photographers
Association. The long-established Foreign
Correspondents' Club offers its members
social facilities and a range of professional
activities, including news conferences
and briefings. During the year, the
Mass Communications Training Board of
the Vocational Training Council continued
to organise upgrading training for those
working in the media, advertising and
public relations sectors. An allocation
of $290,000 from the council enabled the
board to arrange courses, talks and seminars
with professional bodies such as the Hong
Kong News Executives' Association, the
Society of Publishers in Asia, the Hong
Kong Advertisers Association, the Hong
Kong Public Relations Professionals' Association,
the Hong Kong Journalists' Association
and the Hong Kong Audit Bureau of Circulations. |