Talk:Wen Wei Po

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Untitled[edit]

Actually, the paper is not anti-democracy.As you can see from 24 th October,2003 The government actually don't want to interferne so much in order to give more freedom. So the Wen Wei Poa is not really anti-democracy.


Reply[edit]

However, the authoritarian and China-friendly standpoint of the newspaper towards the Article 23 was revealed in its editorial on 3-7-2003. The editorial stated that the legislation of Article 23 should not be delayed in other to preserve the "one country, two systems" demand, while the Beijing only showed a non-intervention attitude to the Article 23 at that time.

An article about Wen wei po 's editorial on 3-7-2003:

Reply[edit]

Anti-democracy means they may criticize any democratic movement in Hong Kong, such as more direct-elected legislators, but it doesn't mean Wen Wei Po is funded/owned by the government.

Gp1Jacky


discussion---

Do we need to add more evidence such as the news or statistics rrather than just write the things on it? I think that will be convincing if evidences are added .


                                                     Gp1 Wendy

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BetacommandBot (talk) 06:25, 21 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Hm.[edit]

It looks like the article is focused on destroying Wen Wei Po's credibility simply because it does not follow certain political "guidelines" "free" newspapers all follow.

Stuff like "Its reports on issues other than politics and China are considered as more reliable" and "Wen Wei Po gained a mean of 4.68 mark, where the maximum mark is 10, among local media organizations" is not backed up by any recent statistics (1996? Really?), and is nothing more than libel. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.149.158.81 (talk) 16:11, 8 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]