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Wen Wei Po was founded in Shanghai in January 1938. The Hong Kong edition was first published on 6 September 1948. In the 1980s, Xinhua News Agency, which served as the de facto Chinese embassy to Hong Kong, reduced its control over Wen Wei Po to reflect China's guarantee of "one country, two systems" after sovereignty over Hong Kong is transferred to China in 1997.
Hong Kong has made no secret of its determination to woo top acts to perform in the city, ... Another op-ed published in its sister outlet Wen Wei Po on Thursday, titled “Messi’s absence is a ...
Wen Wei Po: 文匯報: 1938 in Shanghai 1948 in Hong Kong Paid Daily State-controlled [† 1] Sing Pao Daily News: 成報: 1939 Paid Daily Pro-government Hong Kong Commercial Daily: 香港商報: 1952 Paid Daily State-controlled [† 1] Ming Pao: 明報: 1959 Paid Daily Moderate Oriental Daily News: 東方日報: 1969 Paid Daily Pro-government ...
Lee Tze Chung (Chinese: 李子誦; 21 May 1911 – 11 May 2012) was a Hong Kong journalist. He was the president of pro-Beijing newspaper Wen Wei Po from 1952 to his dismissal in 1989, when he criticised the Chinese government for imposing martial law in response to the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests.
Local media, including the South China Morning Post and pro-Beijing newspaper Wen Wei Po, identified the newly arrested man as Chu Yan-ho, a former member of the now-defunct pro-democracy party ...
Wen Wei Po and other publications supporting the Chinese government produced frequent reports emphasising the Hong Kong government's neglect of the poor. [ 9 ] : 104–106 On March 5, New Evening Post , Wen Wei Po and Ta Kung Pao reprinted an editorial from People's Daily , the newspaper of the CCP Central Committee but removed references to ...
Wenhui Bao (simplified Chinese: 文汇报; traditional Chinese: 文匯報; pinyin: Wénhuì Bào), anglicized as the Wenhui Daily, [2] is a Chinese daily newspaper published by the Shanghai United Media Group. [3]
The Liaison Office also supervises the mainland's enterprises, including owning three pro-Beijing newspapers in Hong Kong- Ta Kung Pao in Wan Chai, Wen Wei Po in Aberdeen, and Commercial Daily in Kowloon, through a subsidiary company called Guangdong New Culture Development.