Staff at major Hong Kong newspaper threaten industrial action over sacking of top editor
Ming Pao Staff Association members meet with management but fail to reverse decision to fire chief executive editor Keung Kwok-yuen
Journalists from Chinese-language daily Ming Pao threatened to take industrial action after the management refused to withdraw the controversial decision to fire its well-respected No 2 editor.
In the latest development over the abrupt sacking of chief executive editor Keung Kwok-yuen, nine members of the Ming Pao Staff Association said they had met the daily’s editor-in-chief Chong Tien Siong and a delegate from the daily’s parent company Media Chinese International on Wednesday, when they urged them to make a U-turn on the decision to fire Keung.
But the association’s call was turned down.
It proposed suspending the staff lunch voucher welfare scheme, which reportedly costs the company HK$100,000 a month, in exchange for re-employing Keung.
This suggestion was also rejected, with the management saying it would be difficult to manage.