The Correspondent, September-October 2012

40

description

The Official On-line Publication of the Foreign Correspondents' Club, Hong Kong

Transcript of The Correspondent, September-October 2012

Page 1: The Correspondent, September-October 2012
Page 2: The Correspondent, September-October 2012
Page 3: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

1

Page 4: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT2

Page 5: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 3

Page 6: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT4

MEMBERSHIP

Page 7: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 5

CLUB NEWS

Page 8: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT6

CLUB NEWS

Page 9: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 7

CLUB NEWS

Page 10: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT8

CLUB NEWS

Page 11: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 9

CLUB NEWS

Page 12: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT10

CLUB NEWS

Page 13: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 11

COVER STORY

Page 14: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT12

COVER STORY

Talk to just about any one of the excellent

Chinese or Hong Kong reporters writing about

China for the newspaper, and, if they’re willing to talk, they’ll quietly

tell about Wang spiking perfectly good stories

or of being told to write more “positive” articles.

Page 15: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 13

COVER STORY

What few have noticed is that self-censorship

is not the only problem. Possibly more worrying

is the newspaper’s new-found proclivity

under Wang to publish dubious stories that

reflect Beijing’s views.

Page 16: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT14

COVER STORY

Page 17: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 15

MEDIA

Page 18: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT16

MEDIA

Page 19: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 17

ARCHIVES

Page 20: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT18

ARCHIVES

Page 21: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 19

MEDIA

Page 22: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT20

MEDIA

Page 23: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 21

MEDIA

Page 24: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT22

ON THE WALL

Page 25: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 23

ON THE WALL

Page 26: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT24

THEN and NOW

Page 27: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 25

MEDIA

Page 28: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT26

MEDIA

Page 29: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 27

MEET THE STAFF

Page 30: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT28

REPORTAGE

Page 31: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 29

REPORTAGE

Page 32: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT30

REPORTAGE

Given the wide range of eateries, Tai Hang appears set for a more radical reshaping.

Page 33: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 31

IN REVIEW

Water, water everywhere The history of Hong Kong is the history

of its relationship with the water: trade,

fishing, exploration, sampan living,

culture, reclamations, sewerage dump

and recreation. Often during that time

the sea was treated with indifference,

but that is now changing.

Page 34: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT32

IN REVIEW

Page 35: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 33

IN REVIEW

Page 36: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT34

IN REVIEW

Page 37: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT 35

OBITUARY

Page 38: The Correspondent, September-October 2012

THE CORRESPONDENT36

PROFESSIONAL CONTACTS

We provide a dynamic, one-stop online servicefor premium name and business cards at affordable prices.

View our website and order online todaywww.namecardman.com

or contact us directly at (852) 3104 1577

HKMacs: British Macintosh Specialist 20 yrs experience + Apple Certification. Personalised training,

software installation/upgrades, computer set-up and parental controls. Networking, troubleshooting and data recovery. iPhone/iPod Touch/iPad management and Lion

Server set-up. PC switchers welcome! Call Vince Loden Mobile: 9348 6884,

Email: [email protected]. Website, Blog: http://hkmacs.com

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/HKMacs

Page 39: The Correspondent, September-October 2012
Page 40: The Correspondent, September-October 2012