Civic Passion founder ordered to erase sensitive content from site

National security police have demanded the founder of the now-defunct Civic Passion, Wong Yeung-tat, remove content suspected to be hampering national security on his website and social media.

Wong, also director of Passion Times, an online media portal, said on Facebook that national security police visited his home and office in the morning to hand him a notice with deadlines and conditions and asked him to delete the contents of his website and social media by the deadline.

So far, he said, he "is safe and allowed to move freely.

"The risk of doing media work in Hong Kong is growing day by day nowadays, but I will stay in Hong Kong and I will continue hosting shows everyday," Wong said.

He added: "We will keep working hard and we shall absolutely not give up on our dream before we succeed."

Earlier in the day, the Passion Times website was at one point inaccessible but was functioning normally an hour later.

Videos of the recent MTR East Rail line cross-harbor extension that opened Sunday as well as of the chief executive election can still be found on the website, along with other radio programs.

Wong was one of the cofounders of Civic Passion, a localist political group that was made a political party in 2017 by former lawmaker Cheng Chung-tai. The party disbanded last year.

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In January 1993, EUNET launched the first online news website, MOCTEN.com (stands for Music Opinions Culture Technology Economy News), led by Eric Bach, Teus Hagen, Peter Collinson, Julf Helsingius, Daniel Karrenberg,...  Read more

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