The Foreign Correspondents’ Club Awards Clare Hollingworth Fellowships |
FELLOWS |
Kriti Gandhi |
Kriti Gandhi is a freelance journalist and recent graduate of The University of Hong Kong, holding a Bachelor’s degree in Journalism and Marketing. She has worked with CNN and NBC News in the past and is currently a freelance associate video producer at the South China Morning Post. |
Jay Ganglani |
Jay Ganglani is a Hong Kong-based journalist with a passion for covering the city’s ethnic minority communities. His work has appeared in NBC News, Asia Sentinel, and the Standard. He holds a Master of Journalism degree from HKU. |
The Foreign Correspondents’ Club, Hong Kong is pleased to announce that it has chosen Kriti Gandhi and Jay Ganglani as recipients of the sixth annual Clare Hollingworth Fellowship, named in honor of the preeminent and path-breaking journalist. |
The panel of judges noted the winners offer clear potential as future leaders both within the FCC and in the wider Hong Kong journalism community. |
The Fellowship is focused on early-career journalists and current journalism school students in Hong Kong. |
The open competition drew significant interest from a cross spectrum of applicants. The adjudicators noted the high standard of applicants and encouraged all to apply again next year. |
For further information on the Clare Hollingworth Fellowship, please visit https://www.fcchk.org/fcc-clare-hollingworth-fellowship-2024-2025-applications-open/ |
Media’s job shall be facilitating understanding, not driving paranoia, says Spokesman of China’s Foreign Ministry Office in Hong Kong
Counsellor Huang Jingrui is the spokesman of the Commissioner’s Office of China’s Foreign Ministry in Hong Kong. Despite being posted in the city since September 2022, he has only given closed door, off-the-record talks to other diplomats and journalists.
That finally changed this September — two years after the spokesman arrived in Hong Kong.
For his first-ever public address, Counsellor Huang spoke at an FCC Club Lunch alongside Correspondent Board Governor William Zheng, an expert on mainland politics who works for SCMP as a Senior China Correspondent.
While Counsellor Huang began his talk by outlining China’s Third Plenum that took place in July and how it will affect Hong Kong, he also addressed the international community’s concerns about declining freedoms in the city.
“China and Hong Kong’s reputation has been smeared over the years, and actually the media is part of it. Media itself has become a problem, especially Western media,” he said.
When it comes to Western media’s coverage of Hong Kong, Counsellor Huang finds that they mainly focus on national security news, such as the enactment of Article 23 of the Basic Law or the enforcement of the Beijing-imposed National Security Law. Counsellor Huang believes that Western media should be more balanced in order to provide people living in other regions a more accurate depiction of what’s happening in Hong Kong.
He also commented on measures taken under President Joe Biden’s administration that have established a quota on the number of Chinese journalists that are allowed to live and work in the United States, which has resulted in some Chinese journalists being forced to return to the mainland. China swiftly created its own quotas for American journalists which resulted in a similar exodus.
Despite these “tit-for-tat” moves, Counsellor Huang emphasised that journalists on both sides are key in developing mutual understanding.
“We hope that there will be more journalists — American journalists in China and Chinese journalists in America — to promote a better understanding between the two countries,” he said.
When asked whether or not Hong Kong still guarantees free expression for both regular citizens and media, Counsellor Huang reminded the audience that while enjoying the “Two Systems”, they should also keep the “One Country” part in mind. Everyone can enjoy freedoms — as long as certain “red lines” concerning “one country” aren’t crossed, he said.
“Don’t just look at the Two Systems,” he began. “We still have to be One Country, and there is always a red line. You can’t overthrow the government. You can’t advocate independence. There’s always a red line. Apart from that, you have all the freedom.”
Counsellor Huang was also asked about the recent cases of journalists being denied entry into Hong Kong. While unable to comment on individual cases, he did maintain the opinion that Hong Kong is a key location for international media, but that everyone has to operate in accordance with the law.
“Everybody’s freedom is limited, and it has to be within the framework of the law. Nobody’s above the law, even if you are the media,” he said.
Before finishing his talk, Counsellor Huang also shared his personal thoughts on what the job of local and international journalists should be.
“It is your job to facilitate understanding — not to facilitate misunderstanding and even driving paranoia, to [a] new McCarthyism. That’s not your job. Your job is to tell the truth, facilitate understanding between countries and people,” he concluded.
To watch the full discussion between Counsellor Huang and William Zheng, please visit the FCC’s YouTube channel:
Lost and Found in Hong Kong: The Unsung Chinese Heroes at D-Day
On June 6th, 1944, nearly 160,000 Allied forces conducted history’s largest-ever seaborne invasion on the beaches of Nazi-occupied Normandy. The invasion, often referred to as D-Day, was a decisive operation that ultimately led to the liberation of France and Western Europe, as well as the end of the Second World War.
Participating in D-Day were a league of Allied nations, including the United States, Great Britain, Canada, Australia, Norway, and many others.
In the 80 years since then, every fact and detail about D-Day was thought to have already been covered in newspapers, books, movies, television shows, and other media.
Until now.
A groundbreaking exhibit by two Hong Kong historians reveals the role that China also played in D-Day — a little-known piece of history that adds a new layer of meaning to the international cooperation in World War II and Hong Kong’s relevance to the rest of the world.
“The shadows of Hong Kong always loom in some random corners of world history,” said John Mak, one of the two lead curators of the exhibit Lost and Found in Hong Kong: The Unsung Chinese Heroes at D-Day.
Mak, along with his fellow curator Angus Hui, spoke about the exhibit at an FCC Club Lunch alongside Correspondent Board Governor Jennifer Jett. Their exhibit was held right next door at the Fringe Club before being transferred to the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
The exhibit began with a surprise discovery in 2015. A decaying apartment building in Sai Ying Pun was scheduled to be demolished, which interested a local photographer who had an eye for ruins and abandoned properties.
While exploring the building, he noticed a door left ajar on the ninth floor. Inside were left-behind items from China’s Republican era. He took photos of these items and posted them on social media. Soon after his photos circulated online, a group of historians visited the building to collect and preserve the items, which were then featured in an SCMP article that December.
Hui, the second curator of the exhibit, was blown away by the SCMP article and its protagonist, Lam Ping-yu, whose diary from 1944 is the only known primary source regarding Chinese participation in D-Day Written on its pages is his firsthand account of being one of 24 Chinese naval officers who were selected for months of special training in the UK.
Their first mission: D-Day.
Hui was majoring in Chinese history and culture at the University of Hong Kong at the time the article was published. He bookmarked it, and in 2017 he circled back to the article and obtained the rights to digitise Lam’s diary. From there, he continued researching Lam’s story and eventually began collaborating with Mak during and after the pandemic.
The duo traveled across Asia and Europe to find more information about the 24 Chinese naval officers — where they came from, why they joined the Chinese navy, how they were selected to go abroad for additional training, their roles in D-Day, and what they did after World War II was over.
Lam was born in Java, Indonesia, in 1911, but wanted to return to his motherland to serve in the navy.
During the Japanese invasion of Manchuria, Lam was dismayed by his country’s decision to prioritise other military operations, so he formally requested permission from Kuomintang leader Chiang Kai-shek to train abroad. His request was denied.
It wasn’t until 1941, when Japan attacked Pearl Harbor and the United States became directly involved in World War II, that Chiang revisited the idea of sending his naval officers abroad in an effort to rebuild and strengthen China’s navy.
While 50 Chinese naval officers were sent to the United States, Lam and 23 other officers were sent to the UK’s Royal Naval College to study English as well as gunnery and artillery skills and British naval traditions.
After their training, Lam was stationed on the HMS Ramillies during the Normandy landings on D-Day. He described horrific battle scenes — artillery attacks and Norwegian destroyers being sunk by German torpedoes — that contrasted with more relaxed moments of warm meals and afternoon tea.
D-Day was a success, and Lam continued to participate in the liberation of southern France during Operation Dragoon in August 1944. Germany surrendered the following May, and the 24 Chinese naval officers received orders to return to China to assist in the ongoing war against Japan.
By the time they arrived, however, the US had dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, leading Japan to formally surrender in September 1945. Lam was reassigned elsewhere, but not before making a stop in Hong Kong to aid in the city’s post-war recovery.
With China embroiled in civil war, Lam and his fellow naval officers then had to decide whether to continue serving under Chiang or join the communist forces of Mao Zedong. Lam was the only one of the 24 British-trained officers who chose neither side, instead establishing residency in Hong Kong before moving to Brazil where he married a woman from Japan and had two children. All his wartime belongings, including his diary, were left in his apartment as it passed to other relatives, remaining there until they were discovered in 2015.
Lam’s story is not just about D-Day, Mak and Hui say, but about the large and small ways in which Hong Kong has always figured in global affairs.
“At a time when there has been a lot of doubt and self-doubt about Hong Kong’s international relevance,” Mak said, “let this be a reminder that as far as 80 years ago, Hong Kong has had a role to play in international history and international events.”
Lam eventually left Brazil for the US at 86 years old, and Mak and Hui are still investigating what happened to him next. They speculate that since his wartime belongings were left behind in Hong Kong, his family may be completely unaware of his legacy. Still, Mak and Hui are confident that as long as they continue sharing their discoveries across Asia and Europe, Lam’s story might reach his descendants — all the way from Hong Kong.
Like Mak, Hui says Lam’s story exemplifies Hong Kong’s historical relevance in the modern world.
“We believe that Hong Kong is a place full of historical and cultural heritage. Just explore it. Keep curious, and then we can always find other extraordinary stories like Mr. Lam’s,” he said.
The exhibit for Lost and Found: The Unsung Chinese Heroes at D-Day is still available for viewing at University Library, The Chinese University of Hong Kong from now until Dec. 25, 2024. Visitors are welcome from 11am to 5pm.
To learn more about Lam Ping-yu’s life, watch the full discussion on our YouTube channel: