منتديات - منتدى - شدات ببجي - شحن شدات ببجي - شحن ببجي - متجر ببجي - متجر شدات ببجي - شعبية ببجي - شدات - شحن روبلوكس - شحن يلا لودو - اقساط - شدات ببجي اقساط - شدات ببجي - شدات ببجي تمارا - شدات ببجي تابي - شحن يلا لودو - شحن يلا لودو اقساط - تقسيط بطاقات سوا - موبايلي اقساط - زين اقساط - ايتونز امريكي اقساط - ايتونز سعودي اقساط - شعبية ببجيمتجر اقساط - شدات ببجي - حسابات ببجي - شدات ببجيشدات ببجي اقساط - شدات ببجي - متجر busd
alabdy Senior Member

This episode contains strong language.

Jimmy Lai was born in mainland China but made his fortune in Hong Kong, starting as a sweatshop worker and becoming a clothing tycoon. After the Tiananmen massacre in 1989, he turned his attention to the media, launching publications critical of China’s Communist Party.

“I believe in the media,” he told Austin Ramzy, a Hong Kong reporter for The New York Times. “By delivering information, you’re actually delivering freedom.”

In August, he was arrested under Hong Kong’s new Beijing-sponsored national security law.

Today, we talk to Mr. Lai about his life, his arrest and campaigning for democracy in the face of China’s growing power.

Guests: Austin Ramzy and Tiffany May, who cover Hong Kong for The Times, spoke with Jimmy Lai, a pro-democracy media tycoon and founder of Apple Daily.

For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily

Background reading:

  • In August, Mr. Lai, his two sons and four executives from Apple Daily were arrested under the new national security law. The publication was a target and a test case for the government’s authority over the media.

أكثر...

أدوات الموضوع
انواع عرض الموضوع

نون - نون ستار - نون السعودية
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2023, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd. منتديات فوريو
adv aglitk by : aglitk