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October 1997
TE,E CoRRXSPOIYDDIIT
To the editor
regional publications that will reflect unlikely to sr-tcceed without non-Asian help.
tl-re Asian perspective is
He points oLrt Asictueeþ' as an example. That magazrne's 7975 lnission statement, Knipp says, rl/as
penned not by an Asian; the From Bill Mellor Editor-in-chief , Asiø, Inc.
As Sondl-ri's failule to pay staff had been w-idely reported, r'eaders
tnagazine's founding editor, the late Michael O'Neill, a New Zealander, wrote it. I claim no inside knowledge to
to go after Sondhi Limtl'rongkr-rl in the September issr,re of Tbe Corresþondent, his inaccurate and
The allegation is, of
say who wrote tl-iat staternent but I knowtl-ris much. The founding editor was T.J.S. George, a full-blooded
n-rean-spiritecl attack on the talented
the authors who wimped'out of
and extraordinarily resilient staff of
putting their names to the letter or
Asian as weli as an experienced journalist and the author of several books long before Asiatueeþ. was
Asia, Inc was quite pathetic. I don't need to take r-rp too much
that such an allegation was publisl'ied unsigned in the magazine. Then in the Septemberissue came
\Øhile Steven Knipp had every right
space defending Asia, Inc.'s
joulnalists. Their skills are amply displayed in the redesignecl October issue of the magazine, which was produced undel the most difficult of circnmstances (how n-iany j ournos have to pr-lt out an edition without having
been paicl for thlee rlonths and q,ith bailiffs prowling the editodal floor?). But it shor-rld be pointed olrt that it is thanks to the superb professionalism
could assume the reference was to us. coLÌrse, olrtrageor-rs. I'm not sure whether I'm more sulprised at the gutþssness of
Steven Knipp's piece on Sondhi. Knipp, of couLse, should have declared an ìnterest. He u.as one of the first freelancers to be given an Asiø, Inc. assignment by Tony Paul and when I first met hin tl-rree years later he was still whingeing about how his piece never came to be published. But what palticularly
of
bugged my staff was his assertion that Asia, h'tc has suffered fi-om a "lack of
Sondhi's media empire, the rnagazine lives on, published by a new company
seasoned journalists" - a preposterous allegation given tl-rat the staff has
in which they ale part-owners. More on that, I hope, in the next is ste of The
decades
of the staff that, despite the collapse
Corresþonclent.
to save Asiø, Inc. has brought out tl'ie best and wolst in the parochial Asian media community. Many joulnalists, most notably our colleagr-res at A€iM rlagazine, have been highly srÌpportive. But we have also hacl to pLlt up with cheap jibes Tl-re battle
from a hanclful of journalistic pygmies u,'ho, perhaps because they cannot liold down decent jobs themselves,
actually seem to rejoice when
a
publication
rr-rns into trouble. A classic exarnple of this trvas an anonymous letter in the August issue
of
Tbe Correspondent pvtrportedly
fi'om "several veteran melnbers". The letter took a ran'rbling and disjointed swipe at people who use the FCC but
of experience on four
continents.
I doubt any Hong Kong editor would put Knipp in the same league as Asia Inc.'s Peter Comparelli and Allen Cheng, or former staffels Tony Paul and Steve Plocto¡. Asia lrtc.3 jor-rrnalisrn and design
have won nllfirerolrs international awards, most recently for the Althur Hacker "Aftel Hong Kong" cover that hangs on the FCC w-a1I. Thlee years in succession we won the Citibank Pan Asia Journalism Awarci for business repolting. The Citibank juclges ale pillars of the Asian business commnnity. I'rl sttre Asict, It't'c.'s readels and advertisers n,ill give greater: ü¡eigl'tt to their jr-rdgment than
to that of a
disgruntlecl freelance
journalist.
don't bothel to join. It then went on
to
accLrse
an unnarled pr-rblication
of picking up non-members' bar bills
"as sorne kind
of perk, when
the
salne company can't seem to pay its
own staff"
From P. Viswa Nathan In "How Sondlii Got It'ùØrong" (Tbe Corresþortdertt, September), Steven Knipp seems to sr,rggest that the desire of some Asians to lar-rnch
launched. To imply tlnatamanof that calibre was not capable of writing the
mission statement is preposterous.
Geolge, being highly critical of
the \Øestern domination of Asian regional rnedia, had been talking about a publication that would see the world from an Asian perspective and become Asia's voice in the world well before he came to O'Neill. \Øhile George was regional editor of the Før Eastertt Economic Reuiew, he
went about organising the financial sLlpport needed for such a project as well as selecting the people who could understand his dream and work with him. After a few years publishing Asiøweele, Geolge stepped down as editor-in-chief to return to India He handed the reins o\/er to his trr-rsted ally O'Neill who, despite his New Zealand origin, was more Asian at heart than many Asians I know. The
fact, however, is this.
rùTithout
George, the Asian, there would have
been no Asiaweeþ..
There is a flaw is Knipp's
contention that the Asian approach,
v'hich Sondhi tried to push, is a concept thzìt neither readers nor advertisers have embraced. Readers and adr.ertisers pick fi'om what is available and sometimes settle for the
best of a bad lot. Again, Asiøweek stands as a good example of l-row a well-thought-out Asian publication can change the attitr-rde of readers and advertisers. Knipp says "Asia's ownmediawill
n'iature and develoP to its fr-r11 potential. But if they rush to give cot'¿titttted otx þ6tge 5
a
corruption told us how a lively,
emerging from the shadow of
useful check on government excesses,
vigorous press was one of the best weapons in the fightfor accountability and against official corruption that
authoritarian rule over the last decade ¡he Philippines, Thailand, Taiwan now see the press playing a key role in the consolidation of democracy, But then again, some find it odd that the wealthiest, most sophisticated Asians, the Hong Kongers, are being told to wait until some time in the
coverage
of corruption has been
while giving an airing to all the accusations and complaints. In Hong Kong, there are no official controls on the local press, but the problemwe keep hearing aboutis one
"self-censorsl'rip" - editors not wanting to offend the new powers-
of
When people and the press speakout J n Manila, the colour was yellow; in Ianngt oL, it was green. But
declaration: "No way, and never
whatever the hue, they were both
an unlikely coalition of business leaders, community organisers, labourites and leftists. And their
Afew days later, I was in Bangkok, where another equaliy extraordinary scene was on display. On Silom Road, a main drag of mostly banks and office biocks, there were thousands of Thais - middle-class office workers, men in suits and ties, women in smart outfits and heels - out marching for democracy and showing their support for a new constitution that many hope
followers turned out by the hundreds
will end the influence of money in
of thousands on a
Thai politics. In Thailand, green
rather exhilarating examples of People
Power.
The Manila rally, on September
2L, was called by the Catholic archbishop, Cardinal Jaime Sin, the former presid ent, CorazonAquino, and
rain-drenched
Sunday afternoon in a vigorous defence of their new-found democracy, their decade-old constitution,
again."
is the colour of those in favour of constitutional reform. And the office workers that
of bright lime green.
and the notion that term limits prevent
day formed
dictatorial abuse of power. At issue was whether President Fidel V. Ramos would be allowed to tinker with the charter to extend his stay in office beyond his legal term, which ends nextMay. Ramos-backers called their campaign "Cha-Cha", for Charter Change, and they claimed to have widespread suppor-t because of Ramos' successful stewardship of the Philippine economy.
Men wore green ribbons on their lapels. Many women chose to wear green outfits to work that day. And along the way, rally organisers in green baseball caps passed out bright
a sea
sometimes uncomfortably,
in her trademark yellow
dress,
warning the would-be charterchangers on the anniversary of Ferdinand Marcos' martial law
stable, but ruled by an unelected military man backed by the powerful armed forces. In those 12 years since myfirstAsia stint, Taiwan has emerged as a freewheeling democracy, and I had the pleasure of covering the first free election for president there last year. And in South Korea, where I
covered the first free presidential election in late 1987, a long-time opposition leader, Kim Dae Jung, is leading in the polls and may even become president in December. These examples of solid and functioning democracies - noisy,
making money.
"No To Cha-Cha" posters and T-shirts
as
speaker
after speaker denounced his government for corruption and ineptitude. These two displays
of
PeoPle Power served as a reminder to me of
just how entrenched PoPular
command chain, where the bottom line is too often just that, the bottom
dates the handover. !Øe heard
line.
complaints that the local press had lost its bite, particularly when it comes to
critical, investigative or analytical
Long-time Asia-watchers say they find it unfortunate, or at least odd, that Hong Kong, which once boasted the
coverage of the mainland.
freestlocalpress inAsia,
And earlier that day, at another FCC panel, a S7orld Bank experl on
Thailand, by contrast, was politically
critique olhis regime by
confidence vote. -With the debate carried live on Thai TV, I watched Chavalit sitting impassively,
we heard that local reporters feel the self-censorship is not new, but pre-
are
developed enough to have full direct elections for a legislature.
I'll just stay on the sidelines of the debate. After all, I'm just a foreign interloper, laden with the baggage of .W'estern r-rpbringing and values, my and still naive enough to get excited by the sight of thousands of people out on the streets,
is nowworried about self-imposed restraints from editors and owners, while colrntries
buffeting by military putschists.
less about democracy and more about
succession
forum on September 24 sponsored by the New York-based Committee To Protect Journalists (see also Page 9), FCC
next century before they
investigates importantissues,
dictatorship, and the democracy
house, sitting through a withering a
hand-in-hand, as experience in the rest of the legion has shown. And a press that asks tough questions, and
looked fragile and unlikely to survive
messy, boisterous they may be - serye
But on the road into town from the airport, and at the sprawling Luneta Parkwhere the rallywas held, I saw mostly a sea of yellow - yellow stìckers. There was even Cory Aquino
in 1986, the Philippines was just shaking off Marcos' 20-year
green placards. And as the green rally took place, the embattled prime rninister, Chavaiit Yongchaiyudh, was at the parliament
of opposition MPs staging a îo-
and baseball caps and bumper
democracy has become in much of Asia. \Øhen I first landed in the region
impedes development. Democracy and a lively press go
is a good grtalantol against government excess. Our colleagues inthe local press know that well - but the message sometimes seems to get lost further up the media
that-be, and spiking critical stories or slanting their editorial stance. At an
-
as a useful rejoinder to those who tell us that Asians somehow possess a different set ofvalues, that they care
And one other point is itnportant here: in all these examples of Asian
democracy, the press plays a vital
lole. In Mantla, the relentless press criticism of the Ramos charter-change moves cleady infuriated the president
- but also helped build
popular
From I(eith Statham
To the editor
predictions on Hong Kong postJuly
Asians their 'own voice' before the industry has the ability to delìver on that promise, their efforts will be self-
defeating." That is a repugnantly condescending statement. By Knipp's own assessment "Sondhi seems to be a man of good intentions plagued by bad advice
provided by expensively
bad
advisers". There is lesson to be learned here. None of these "advisers", senior
editors and executives, except
a
namesake head of the editorial team,
was Asian. Had Sondhi and his advisers looked around Asia to mobilise a predominantly, if not
Cordingley's "what a sodding cheek"
complaints" about "balls-aching tedium" he accuses me of in your September issue. (What a master of the English language he is!)
That he, of all peopie, admits to being "in awe" of anything ("gobsmacked" would have been more in character), let alone care about my own or Ted Thomas's views shows a degree of humility which, in itself, for
him is remarkable: that
he
misrepresents and tries to rubbish the PR business is entirely predictable. If he seriously thinks that I spend
and Asiar¿, Inc., they could have
than half of the story: the half that is
found highly competent people and kept Sondl'ri's "1ong pockets" at least half full. Is it possible that these farang
favourable to
advisers did not want Sondhi, an Asian,
trumpeted the constitutional teform
dominance over the regional media, and so they went about quickly to empty his long pockets?
has been ,
corporations have relocated. Cordingley, from his ivory tower,
has obviously noticed changes that
the rest of us haven't and rants on about a million people losing "the vote" and then goes into his "ballsaching" routine about me and Ted Thomas not caring, on the basis that all that concerns us is that "nothing has changed for the business community". Thank God! One thing is for sure, whether we like it or not, Hong Kong m the business community. \Øe are either in it, serwicing it or commenting on it. There isn't anything else!
part (or anyl) of my life "devoted to ensure that journalists never tell more
to succeed and challenge Western
debate, and the Thai media's relentless
1,
Peter
wholiy, Asian team io rvn Asiø Times
opinion that saw the huge rally turnout.
In Thailand, too, the press has
about the accr)racy or otherwise of some of the international media's
but I have to respond to
July 1, the Beijing government noticeable in Hong Kong only by its absence and, contrary to many predictions, none of the 183 banks in HongKong has lefttown and no major Since
I don't want to drag on the debate
...
clients", then he does
a huge injustice not only to everyone working in PR but also to his own (?)
profession by implying that journalists are stupid andmalleable. Mostof them are certainly not, and nor are we! The notion is childish! That the prophets of doom on the handover got it wrong is for all to see.
@
ST(lLICHNAYA Ietters to the editor øre always win yourself a bottle of Stolicbnayafor øn original or welcome
letter- but we reserue the rigbt to editfor clarity orfor
witty
reasons of space.
October' 1997 TÅE CORRXSPONIIDIIT
Left: An agitated Malaysiatt Prime Minister Mabatbir Mobamad speaks out against George Sot"os and intentational cLlt'renc! traders
Riglit. Cbinese Vice-Prentier Zbtt Rottgi| got on uitb tbe main story and. laud.ed. Cbina's economic refotuts
footage to justify the expense. Little thought is given to readers andviewers who have followed the ploceedings as
€ s
a cheap substitute for Mogadon.
ù
This year was different. The epic
ùq q
Mahathir-Sor os ding--dongwas both fun
and interesting.
\7ho could resist the invective
Buddy, carryou spafe me a ringgit?
Geolge Soros cl-rarged the good Dr Mahathir with being a menace to his
when they found they had a leal story on their hands. And what a story it was. The leader of one of Asia's tiger economies launching a frontal attack on one of the wodd's richest men and the two of them slugging it out on the fi'inges of last month's \Øodd Bank/ InternationalMonetaryFundmeetings. These events are generallygenteel
countly, while the Malaysian prime minister accused Mr Soros and his ilk of being engaged in the "unnecessaly, unproductive and immolal" business
affails where seemingly arcane matters
of clevelopment and other forms of financing are discussed between centlal bankers and finance rninisters
temporarily l-rogging a shred of lìmelight on the world stage. They are
lfo l-ris sr-rrprise, Sterze \Zines found tl-rere q/as lalore to tl-re rù(zor1d t>a-nk/II\/{F conference tkra-n a l>r-rnch of Ì>oring bankers
as
o one was rrìore amazed than the -ù7orld Bank press officers
accorded a spur'íous significance simply becar-rse so many people attend and such a large su,athe of media has l¡een mobilised to cover the event. Newspapels, r'adio and television stations ale compelledto invest heavily
in sending theil lepresentatir¡es and so tend to take a 1ot of copy and
of ctrrrency trading?
Moleover, the debate
was
interesting and significant. Developing countries are genuinely worried about
their r,r¡lnerability to the ìnternational financial markets recently admitted to their shores, On the other hand, participants in those malkets are wary of the governments which regulate
reforms and let everyone know, yawn, yawn, that Hong Kong was still open forbusiness (PRnote to the SAR'smedia advisers: if everything is normal you don't have to say an],thing, if you do people will suspect that everything is somewhat less than normal). However the local media did their best to make the China story - almost
entirely a repetition of the previous
This year qzas difFerent. ll-he epic À4ahra"tkrir-Soros ding-dong rñ/as botl-r fr-rn and interesting.
"fact" was gleaned by his use of a clutch
of heavily accented English words. As is known to all, as the Chinese like to say, Mr Zhu is the heir apparent
to the even rnore dour and infinitely less user-friendly Premier Li Peng. Mr Zhu is clearlynofoolbutequallyclearly,
from where I was sitting, he did not appear to be the new Messiah.
However he knows all the right buzzwords about economic liberalisation and can talk debt ratios along with the best of them so he could plausibly be presented as "New China Man". The alternative, as we saw in Li
Peng's opening addless
to
the
meetings, was less palatable, Clear'ly someone had forgotten to tell Mr Li that he was no longer at the Communist Party Congress and that the average banker feels a tad uncomfortable u,hen
being lectured about the defeat of imperialism and the stluggle against
them.
week's 15th Congress of the Chinese
As everthis was not supposedtobe the main story. Conlerence organisels almost never understand that what they perceive to be the main story does not exactly set the rest of the world alight. No, the main story from the host's
the enslavement of labour. As for me, I enjoyed ít, but then I happen to be a collector of Maoist kitsch. I arn not, however, a great fan of
governlnent and the new sovereign
Conmunist Parly story - the main story. Iuckily the story had a hero. Unluckily tlie hero was the rather dour Zhu Rongji who had to be made to look not only good, but perfect, to fill the role. Mr Zhu, we were told was witty, open, well informed, accessible and, accolding to one Chineselanguage
power, was to lar-rd China's economic
newspaper, spoke pelfect English - this
why lepresentatives of regines, with
point of view, rneaning the
SAR
the Hong Kong secr-rrity services who yet again demonstrated their firm belief that journalists are the most dangerous people on earth. How else to explain
Oc¡ober 1997 THE
CORf,.ESPOilIIENT
Right; Sonteone bctcl.fcugotten b rell Ii. Peng he' tucts 17o lcntger ctt tbe þ6fft))
How did you report after the handover?
col'r81?ss
blood on their hands, were allou,ed to freely enter meeting halls while the media had to report ages before each set-piece event to be frisked, searched and corralled, presr-rmably to avoid suicide attacks or something similar. (Note ntulber 2 to SAR PR men:
Did the press harze to toe the Cl-rina line a.fter Jul>t 1 or l-rad tl-rey been doing it all a"lc>ng? A ror-rnclta-ble lTret at thre Clul> t<> ana"lyse journalisrrr in tl-re nes/ era
you don't win friends and influence people by treating them as scum believe me, this is an old Chinese ploverb, almost certainly originating from Confr-rcius.)
Jt's business as usual in postI Hrndou.rHong Kong. But if ihings
So when people ask rne: "How I have to say, aside fron-r the searches, the sight of too many men in suits and the horrendous prices fol cups of coffee, itwas fine for me. I came away with n'rore data than anyone could ser-iously need in an
was it for you?"
are fine for business, what about for journalism? On the fringes of the \ØorldBank/ International Monetary Fund meetings tlie International Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), a New York-based pressllre group which monitors press freedom around the world, presented a report on the Hong Kongmedia after'
lìfetime ancl I will use it ^vetage shan'ielessly folever more. Readels yoLr have been warned.
the handover, Freedom
is tbe Hong Kortg q corresþonclent of The Indepenclent of E London. He is auailable for couerz,ge of all finøncial euents, nteetings witb S ò q Rítø Føn and børmilzuabs E { Steue Vines
H:iî,*:,iï-.ä:iiì Breatlre
A
Free?
f
He pointed out concerns about
self-censorship and individual
incidents such as the failure of Next Media Group to find an investment
bank to sponsor its initial public offering.
information capital of Southeast Asia, he recalled how that when he covered
the Philíppines under Marcos Hong Kong was important place to rneet contacts where the restlictions of the regime would not be felt. "You could breathe easier, " he said. "It is a pleasant
fact that there is still an aspect of freedom in Hong Kong." Neumann highlighted the press's role inrootingout cot.rrption. "As China seeks to open its markets,
¡r J
louncl taþle
centre for reporting for 50 million or more Chìnese speakers outside China itself and Hong Kong that rely on Hong Kong as a centre of reporting about China and the rest of the world,"
the lole that the Hong Kong press will be vitai,"
'
he said.
I
Dr Jonathan Mirsky, East Asia editor of The Timesof London, made a confession. "I did think it was going to worse," he admitted. But he believed
discussion was held in the
Club dining room to examine the issues with representatives of the CPJ and lnembers of the local and the overseas media,
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the fears for press freedom
President, Keith Richburg.
that correspondents like
SØilliam Orrne, the CPJ's executive director,
Handover.
was
himself felt before the
In April Mirsky had
quicktopointoutthat ft
most of the people in
rãáìr
the
*... fr..iv,o r.""*
s
ort
the panel: ionathan Mirsky' Liu Kin-ming, Keith Ricbburg, Tctlv Chenp. A. Litt Neuntann and \X/illictnt Orme
his colleague, A. Lin Neumann,
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he had not exaggerated
the
rnore aDout tne worKrng of the Hong Kong than he was. He let
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moderated by
However, Neumann said: "rVe
a
acknowledge, gratefully so, that there
veteran correspondent in the region
has been no overt action taken against
and the CPJ's Asia programme coordinator, who wrote tl-re report, oulline the cornrnil.lee's views. "One particular concern that we
the media in Hong Kong, either the EnglishJanguage or ChineseJanguage
have, " Neumann said, "is forthe future
Hong Kong is now the financial capital of China and the window through information abotrt Cl-rinese
of Hong Kong
-
not as a centre of
English-language media for East Asia because the English-language media can look after itself at the end of the day but the future of Hong l(ong as a
rnedia. \7e also recognise ear-ly in the process."
markets cilculates to the
it is very
rùØest
and the
resI of Asia, Neumann said. Undellining the city's role as the
asked Tung Chee-hwa,
then Chief Executive designate, how his
working life would be on July 2 and had been alanned by the response. "He said'why don'tyou wait and see'. I said I was a very impatient man, wlry don't you tel1 me now? He said: 'Read Articie 23'." That article ofthe Basic law covers treason and sedition. And Mirsky was alarmed. However, since the handover, Mirsky had written articles for the Hong
Kong Economic Times on \Øei Jingsheng and Zhao Zryang without fear or favonr. October 1997 TÃE coRRf,SPolfIlEilT
Nevertheless, Nlirskywas damning abont rnost of the Chinese-language press. "rü/hatever clranged in the press happened tr¡o years ago ancl finished a year ago," he saicl.
The papers were caleful abor¡t liow they repolted on China In fact, he said, they were nseless at it now. "I used to be a regulal leadel of Ming
Pao.
I wouldn't bothel to buy it
anymofe."
1ot
Neumann replied tliat the CPJ would conlinue to rììon ¡tor tlìe sitr Lation even if itwas not on the front pages although
he added: "Tlie papers are
journalists had to band together to see
very good on the tl-iings that Ml Tung says he's interested in. They are real
that any incidents were publicised However, he said: "Tl're foleign press is a notol-iously unleliablg guarantor of anlthing \ü/illiam Ol'n-re said: "I would be leally surprisecl if Hong Kong did not become even ûlore attractive for \øestern media because of leporting on China. It would seem to be a mot'e
Br-rt
issnes : housing, con'uption, edr-rcation,
health and the state of tl'ie har-bour. Theyare forthright and do whatpapers
ought to do." The two English-langlrage papers sliowed no signs of differ-ence, he nraintained. Although tlne flong Kong Standardmight see itself as a patriotic paper it still ran plenty of things that Beijing would not 1ike. Mirsþ had two other complaints: that the Hong Kong Government had decided to have no truck with foreign correspondents and that tl-re poiice's treatment of the press during the demonstrations at the \Øorlci I3anl</ IMF meetings was shameful an<l not a good augrrry lor the futule.
Fol Liu Kin-nring, opinion page editor of Íhe Ecottornic Times and vice-chairpel'son of the Journalists' Association, it had seemed a calm transition but it was too early to tell wliat the effect of the handover had been on the pless. "\Øe still have 597 months to go," l'ie said of the life of the Special Adrninistratíve Region.
Some things had cheered him though. "The NCNA l'ras cancelled the post of spokesman," Liu said. "The gentleman wl-io r-rsed to come everyday ancl gir.e us loads of noise pollution -
we don't have to endure that garbage," he explained. "I always believedJuly I 1997 was only a syrnbolic day. Tl'ie handover happenecl a longtime ago. Tl'ie change took place long ago," Liu said. "\Øait until next May until the first legislature is elected and they will enact legislation f-ie was gone. So
'
agree that thet'e are a
nndercurrent,s," Cheng said. He said the change to Chinese sovereignty had been a long process ofabout 10 years From the floorJonatlian Braude of the Soutb Cbina Monzing Post said that the foreign press was bor-rnd to leduce its numbers in Hong Kong. Lin
efficient place to cover the China story.
"
He cited tlie growth of economic
rüÇzkraterzer cl-range
day before made sr-tle tliat he inadvertently hit rne with a crttsl-r barrier'. "
Terry Cheng agreed t1-rat the police hadbeen excessive in their'handling of the protests. Jonathan Mirsky said Chinese leaders don't deal with the press. He re called how a British mellber of theJoint tiaison Gror-rp had told him
the Chinese side had insisted: "Our leader clon't v'ant to see or hear any Terry Nealon of RTHK contrasted
Sil Percy Cradock's comment about Cliris Patten being the incredible slrrinking govel'nor with Jonathan Mirsky's about the clrrrent adrninistration being the incredible shrinking government Nealon said: "The main reasonwliy
u/e are not able to get the flow of information we are used to from govelnment is because of our incredible shrinking Legco." The absence of Jarnes To, Maltin Lee,
Nealon said, adding that he had seen no change in the atmosphere at RTHK since the handover.
In response to a qlrestion fi'om Hedley Thomas of the Soutb Cbina
Morning Post al¡ont jor,rrnalism which had
vested interest in tlie Hong Kong story. a
Retulning to Jonathan Mirsky's point about the handling of the press during that week's demonstrations, Alaria Maria Sala of the Spanish agency EFI recounted her treatment al the hands of the police. "I went to the Monday demo," she said. "There was
fole ign
correspondents' fears abolÌt restraints on the press, Jonathan Mirsky cited the SCMP's publication of \Øei Jingsheng's lettels. "On that day something happened at tl'ie Posl and it went back to being a leal newspaper' ag in," he said. On t1're restrictions placed on Hong Kong leportels in China, Liu Kin-rning desclibed how the mainland felt Hong
to
Kong had become a base for snbversion since the Tiananmen
Despite her accreditation for the rneetings sJre was told to legistelagain
Square lrrassacl-e. This had resulted in
an
afna.zing
fatio of police
demonstrators."
to coverthe protests \Øhen she left and
returned to the allotted area she was
on Alticle 23."
physically prevented from leaching the press area and told to register again. The officers concelned refr-rsed to give their names and nr,rmbers. Only the
For Ter'ry Cheng, editor of the I{ong l{ong Stanclørd, the post-
presence of several TV crews who began to take an interest in her pliglrt
handover months hacl been "so far, so good". "But I agree it is still too early to make a fim conch-rsion and I also
made the officers back off. She added that the next day: "One of the officers who l'iad harassed me the
rXzlren the part;z brol' gl-rt forq.ard its latter-day sair-rts, Dorrrirric Z,ieg,l.er s/as there to ¡>rorzide ternptatiorr ResobLteQ striue
the lailing of a Ming Pao reporter. "The case of Xi Yang certainly sent Lts a ve1y, vely cleaf message: 'Don',t you dare intelvene in areas we don't
want you to othelwise you will know qrhere you'll encl up'," Liu said. "And it's not just on political news," Lir,r added. "Mr- Xi v,as implisoned because he was cligging in financial intefest rates. The message datzL ^nd has been very clear."
@
to cany
oLLt Deng Unstuentingly upb olcl Marxist-Lenit'tist-M ao -Ze dong
"
Xiaoping
Council was possibly rnuch more impoltant than we realised before,"
in tl-re press hal2pened tq¡o years a.g<> artd finisl-red a y<-af a"g<)
modelworkers
demonstrators."
Chlistine Loh andMalgaretNg had had a real effect. "The loss of that Legislative
d
Blessed ate the
Tbeory
Tbougbt. . ." - 15th Congless Par-ty of China
of the Communist
J lnr*.,.'ingìy. There ale ploblerns LJ il you do rlrings tlrat wry, and
r-rnexpected benefits if you do not. Recently, tl'ie car in which my friend
in
it. A mere one-and-a-ha1f hours of eally molning is allocated to foreigners, as well as to those locals wishing to get married, to undergo a selies of checks and to answer a series of questions about "social" diseases, schizophrenia, paranoid delusions, and other psychoses.
The scant time allotted shrihks
further as doctors finish their
seems. The needle is meant as a gestLrre of reasslrrance, for it is still in
its wl'apper and is unpeeled
pregnantly in front of you. Behind the stern mask, warmth and humour break out, for the foreígn phobia of Chinese needles is noq, known to all, though thele is not yet a category fol it on the medical forms.
newspapel-s, something I had learnt
China u'as ricling
It occurred to me
ran LÌnss"elvingly into a lolry. The sr-rlgeon
that the warmth behind the nask
w'ho operatecl on l-rim smokecl Lln--
might pr-ovide a way
of understandìng
su'elvingly, sapping l-r1y fliend's lifesaving morale. This
the new, irnprol'ed Communist Party and
its congress.
The congress's outward show'is a mix of stern rhetoric, slogan and
last u,-as restored by a
second doctor, who burst thror-rgl'r the
su.ing doors of the theatre, swervingly
negotiated the operating table and
the tyranny of tedium.
No change here. But the subliminal lnessage - al1 that
.s
I
'ñ
disappeared thlor-rgh s the opposite doors; (5ù-o q q on his bicycle.
I rerlenbered
stuff about thought liberation and the Beijing
btLs cottcltLctor
this on the n-rorning of tlie opening of the party congress, an occasion, I thought, fol seizing tl-re day, playing truant frorl the Gleat Ha1l of the People, and resoluteiy seeking rhe nredicai exarnination in a northern Beijing subnrb for the lack of v'l'iich, no p1'ospective con espondent can entertain the hope
of living in Beijing. Choosing a party congress for the clay of your meclical exanination, I now suggest, has mnch to commend
Li Suli (t"ight) sharing ber thotLgbts tit the Cot'rgress
modeln entelprise - is
warmer. Read oul on a previous, failed mission to the hospital. Yet on this occasion, there was nothing to read but acres about the congress. -ùØork started on tine, and ran through to its allotted hour.
The X-ray machine, a medical friend told me, was the tlue dangel, thanks to its unswerving lacliation. Most visitols are concerned about
the blood test: a
n-rasked rnedico
conrnanding you with a long needle
to hel bench. Yet all is not as it
actions, the party seems to say, not our lips. Thank God it is that way round. But what dangels this brings to a party that no longer intends words to lnean what it wants them to mean! Heavens, people might no longer take you
seriously. Tl'ie Vatican, that other lnaster in wielding langr-rage as an instrlrment of rule, would never cor-nmit such an elementary mistake. Rome means what it says. \Øho knows? October 7991 T'dE GoRRXSPoIDDIII
_T
The island the araillery forgot HaIf a- rnillion shrells landed on Qr-rerrro;z in sb< qzeeks in 1958. Noqz only laaotor scooters disturb it peace, reports Gar4r N4arctrant
T I
i-ru¿n't expecteci Lo run into
a
reminderof theFCConthis remote island, but there he was, the late
Charlie Smith and other foreign correspondents in living black and white. \Øe happened on the photograph (which I'd seen before in Tbe Corresþond.ent) of repoltels
È
È
o q oo
ò
{
Tbe outward. sbow is
a mix of stent rhetoric, slogan and the
tlra.1xtxJ) of teclium
standing outside the "Quemoy Press Club" in the August 23 Artillery \Øar
announced an " even-day ceasefire", and fol the next 20 years the two sides traded artillery fire on alternate days (with Sundays a day of rest), Instead of artillery shells, they fired canisters containing propaganda leafl ets.
toward China. They carried propaganda as well as pocket calculators, digital wristwatches and other products of Taiwan's capitalist
The volume of war of words
factories (including, it is said, seethrough lingerie) to demoralise the mainlanders. As far as I know, no
increased to karaoke-like levels, with
one has determined the effectiveness
the
mainland
broadcasting
of silk panties as a
propa-ganda
weapon.
All of this
non-
in
1997,
Museum on that
Shanghai's failingwaterworks: "Good
after 10 minutes the local press did so too. And after 15, even the impassive model workers started to fidget. After all, the hero Li Gtioan, a well-digging coionel, had notyet come outwith his masterline, and this he did now, damn
largest of 1,2 tiny
majorbattlefields
man Xu Hu, you are the Lei Feng of the 1990s. !(/hat is the Lei Feng spirit
the technological breakthroughs in Daqing: "I myself would rather drink
islands covering just
decades ago gradually
felt itself rather self-consciously on
ofthe
waterfrom
58 square rniles, is more than a scenic
opened up to local, then international
show during the congress. And there was one parg showpiece over which needles of no mattel what length could
by Zhao Ziyang, had circulated that
tropical getaway. Fol those too young to lemembet, this outpost about a mile off Xiamen on the coast of China was on the TV news and in the
tourism. This fortified little
The party's insincerity perhaps now provides grounds enough for its claim to be Catholics' legitimate shepherd
(who "brings br:ight warmth to the people"): "Li Suli, what are your deepest implessions of the Party
in
congress?" To the "good man" Xtt Hu,
china
a plumber stemming the tide of +**
The improved Communist Party
not take precedence. The party's staunchest "nodel" workers were to be paladed one afternoon before the press, They would answer qnestions:
even from foreignersl This, the party spokesrnan beamed, was an historical event, a firstl
The event ought to have run smoothlyfor,
as
the model spokesman
put it: "These four are heroes much admired by the people of China, and inthemyou canfindthe fine traditional virtues of the Chinese: industry and hard work." Amongst the 1oca1 press there was due reverencetowardthese laysaints. To the Beiling bus conductor, Li Suli
1990s?"
Yet a letter, purpoltedly written
very rnorning, calling for
a
reassessment of the Beijing massacre tn7989.Sothe foreignpress, in dogged
style, plessed the model workers on their views about Tiananmen Square. This was a matter, the good man Xtt Hu said, that he ignored when it was brought r.rp on pipe-mending missions to neighbours'homes at night. The party's model spokesrn anhad had enough of the foleign taltnts.
Suspending questions, he delegated a hero of the Daqing oilfields to list tl-ie number of scientific and tecl-inological breakthroughs that had contributed to leaps in production there. Æter five rninutes, the foreign press had tired of this, andbeganto chatter;
bitterwell, but if I can help the people drink from wells with sweet a
water, then my ambitions are fulfilled." After that assurance, itwas back to the Daqing oilfields. And this iswhere, modesty suspended for a moment, I
Iay clain to contributing to party history. I caught the eye of the impassively bored Li Suli; I made a theatrical gesture of yawning; and her
bright warmth showed itself as an nncontrollable fit of giggles. The newspapers the next day, of course, chose to show her earnest side, noting
sense ended
with the
general relaxation of international tension. líhat
Taiwanese island.
Quemoy (Kinmen, or Golden Gate, to the Chinese), the
papers daily in the 1950s. In an attempt to capture the Taiwanese islands, the Comrnunist army launched
was one of the world's
foreigners for about
a
Communist propaganda to Quemoy.
Taíwan retaliated with four 30,000watt loudspeakers (supposedly the
as the papers dulynoted, a rematkable landmark in par-ty candour.
Over the next 44 days, they lobbed half-a-million shells on the
world's lar-gest) on the island blasting anti-CommlÌnist messages and rock
@
a
year is remarkably casual. About 20
Daqing s progress. The occasion was,
of
few
island which has only been open to
massive artillery barrage on Quemoy on August 23, 1958.
Dontinic Ziegler is bureatL cbief The Economist in Hong Kong
a
minutes after arriving onthe 55-minuteflight from Taipei, we have checked into the River Kinmen Hotel, and are in Kincheng village at the motor-scooter rental shop. The grinning owner shoves a form in Chinese at me, and says his only three
words of English: "Name. Number.
islands. Taiwan, equipped by the US,
songs acfoss the naffow strait. And
Money."
with an artillery and air offensive, severely damaging
when the wind was right, Nationalist
mainland forces. In October, China
of helium balloons over the
'ùØhat number does he want? Passport? Credit card? International Driver's Licence? I scribble my FCC
retaliated
forces on Quemoylaunched thousands
years
October. 1997 TÃE CORRXSPONIIXIIT
It is eerie, seeing this once forbidden
zone, just over a rnile away, and imagining the deadly artiilery duel. Perhaps it is the onlybit of theirformer horneland thaL many of these Taiwanese will ever see. Riding on to the nolth-west point of the island, we come to the Kuningtou Military History Museum near the site where iocal forces repelled a major
Communist amphibious
as
sault in
79
49
(10 years before the deadly artil1ery duel). Displays hele are mainly huge,
heroic battle-on-the-beach oil paintings, some basic mock-ups of the
battle zone, plus weapons such AmericanM5Al tanks, knownhere
as as
Kinmen Bears.
Continuing on, and frequently getting lost in the maze of roads, we
find the August 2J Artillery
\Øar Museurn. Like the entire island, this is
noY/ a swolds-to-ploughshares endeavour. Set in
a
pleasant park with
a Iake, it has an F-86 jet fighter, a 155mm cannon and an amphibious landing craft, aIl now backdrops for tollrist photographs. High-spirited Tbe atmosþbere seems
youths strike heroic poses before the pieces, hoist their gidfriends into the
untbreatening, Iike a military tbeme park
jet engine, and click off souvenir snapshots fol the folks back home.
membership number and give him the
equivalent of about US$20 in
Taiwanese dollars. He hands me the
keys to an almost new burgundy scooter of the type that gigolos ride in Italianmovies, andleaves us to it, with no instructions, no helmets. But these machines are simple, with no clutch, no gears, no shifting, just gas and brake controls. The light
traffic in the few blocks of town presents no problem, andwe are soon
out on the open road, exulting in the
born-to-be-wild, wind-in-your-hair riding - even though we can only reach about 35 miles an hour. The pleasant, pine-covered island with its excellent, empty roads is perfect for motorcycle riding. The island is a repository of fascinating military sites and
eye on tourism) call a "park on the sea". Andwiththe captive labourof all those soldiers based on the island, Quemoy is as trim and clean as a military base. As we scooter across the island, we happen on soldiers everywhere in
Station, the closest spot
lfhe island is a repository c>f f a s c irl.ating rnili taÍy sites and lraerrroraf>ilia., as qzell as natr.rral Ì>eauq. mottled, camouflage uniforms, like
with beaches and pine forests. Decades of large scale reforestation, with each soldier stationed there responsible for
Chinese male Spice Gir1s. It is the most militarisedplace I've seen, with armed
growing one tree, has succeeded in the greening of Quemoy, turning it into what residents (with an obvious
emplacemeîts, anti-^ircraft guns mounted on the t'oundabollts, and jeeps and army trucks draPed with
as
well
as
.
the island, andthe Mashan Obseruation
natural beauty
memorabilia,
netting. Yet the atmosphere seems unthreatening, like a military theme park, and thele appear to be few restrictions (except the bases) as to where we can go Navigating with our Chinese map, we reach the north-eastern point of
guards standing by
sandbag
to
China. Despite not speaking a word of English,
two bespectacled armed soldiers
Inside, the nÌuseum displays grainy black-and-
white photographs of Quemoy's military past.
There is also a display of English, Flench and Spanish
news clippings
and
pictures depicting war correspondents with
PRESS
on theil helmets and TV newsmen with hand-held
standing guard at the camp entrance make it clear that we can't enter now, The station is closed fol lunch. Shortly before 1. 30pm a half-dozen
newsreel cameras. And there
tour buses appear and disgorge hordes
slirn Charlie Smith, outside a
of excitable, amiable rustics. The
bunker under a makeshift
solcliers let us pass, and we follow the
"Quemoy Press Club resident mernber-s only" sign.
chattering crowd into a tunnel, which goes a long, long way, arrow-straight towards the beach. At the end, the tunnel opens into a bale, blue-painted room, with narrow eyeJevel slits along the outer wall. China is visible just beyond the narrow strait. rùle all take turns peering through one of the five mounted binoculars to what was once "The Bamboo Curtain"
.
it is, the famous photo of the youthful and jovial correspondents, including
a
\X/ith dark (and the
cocktail hour)
fast
q
\e
we return to the I'rotel, and reluctantly appr-oaching,
hand the scooter key to the desk clerk. It is only a pansy
È
ù res, tourists
little bíke, but I feel like a Hell's Angel robbed of his
Harley.
@ October 7991 TÃf,
GORRISPOI\IIIENT
Magnificent lens in those flying rrrachines One photograpl-rer has dedicated l-ris life to sl-rootin5l frorrr the cockpit of fighter ¿ttrcra.ft. He told Ste¡zen l(nipp qzl-rat keeps l-rirn up there szhere l-re belongs
fl,,-,r.,g1.r his business
also published 1'ris ou,n specialist
Flance, Switzerland, Italy ancl Japan
calendar every year since 1981 and is
Katsu Tokunaga is theworld's forernost
legularly commissioned by r-nultinationai arriation companies ancl various air forces to do l-iis mid-air
and Canada. \X/hat does it take to photograpl-r fighter planes l-rr-rrtling across the
czrlcì sirnpll leacls Plloto Joulnalìst . ancì lre hr-rrnbly hesitates to acknowledge it,
I
aircraft photographer. His u,olk, and his life's passion are flying tlachines. No, not the standard con'imercial ailclaft we all know and loatl'ie, but the a\
¡esome powelful missile-like
photographic rnagic for them. \Øhile lie has encountered a few othel pl'iotographers like himself, they only workecl within theil own bolders .
heavens atneally 1,000 miles perhor,rr'? Talent ancl a very tor,rgh stornach are not enough, equal amor-rnts of patience
and paper-work are also needed.
l-rovn' good a photographer yol-Ì may be, yor-r can't sirnply shovr. up
No matter
rlachines that rnake up the fightel aircraft of thewodd'stop air
at an air
forces.
youtl'iful-looking
to fly u,'ith a
39-year-old
squaclron. "That
has specialised in air-toair photography. "I
quite inpossible," Katsu says.
First, a photographel mnst have
says. "Bute\/ersince I was a child I liked
a special permit,
ailplanes, and it s/as lr'ìy hobby to
issued by various air'
folces, wl'rich show
that the holder
photograph them. But of coulse then it n,as only possibly
also had proper Beþrc euery.f'light Katsu Toktutaga sþencls an hour telling
tbe
pilors uhat he utants
rlltch tine on t1're ground. Each year he spends some 200 days flying to hardly spends
clifferent locations Froln his n'iol'e than 600 hours'
flying time in the cockpits of tl'ie n'ol'ld's most advanced jets he has produced 17 books. His tliost recent book is fol tl'ie Allstrian Air Force, u.'hile his next is being plodr-rced for the Veneztielan Air Force. Katsr-t lias
As far as he is awale, tl-iere is no othel' photographef who has flown in nearly 50 differenttypes of airclaft, q,'ith some 35 different ail forces. Katsu has also been airborne u.'ith most of theworld's militaly aerobatics tezrrls as wel1,
including the United States Air Force's Thunclerbirds ancl the US Naly's Blue Angels andJapan's Blue Eagles. He's alsc¡ flown with teams from Russia.
safety training.
"Each air folce
who lives in Tokyo,
'-'*.
l-ras
an understanding of aelonautics ancl has
fi'om the ground."
Today Katsu,
jet
would be
probably har.en't gros/n np," Katsut
I.#+*
base
sornewhere and ask
Since 1979, the.
have similarlequirerlents," says KatsLr. "There's a u.'l'itten test to pass about general knowledge,
plus physical training al¡out hou. to handle G-forces and u'hat to do in an emergency. In the US Na'uy, you must be able to swim, ancl drere's a weeklong snlival course on how to l-ianclle hypothelrnia in case you have to eject at sea " These perrnits, wl-rich Katsu holds October'
199- THI
CORRXSPONDEIì|T I
\¡ith
a l-ralf dozen air lorces inclucling An-ierican, tsr'itisl-r, Flench, Italian and -fapanese, mr-rst be renewecl t'egular'l1r.
"Usually, I just do tl'ie refresher courses togetlie| u,ith pilots," .says Katsu Over his 18-year career, Katslt has built up a sterling reputation rzitl-r fighter pilots alound tl'ie ,;r,'odcl, ancl this sor-r-ietilr-res make his wolk easier
'Tl're community of
ail-claft
pl-rotographels is really \/e1y small," he notes. "Everybocl), knows e\/erybody. 5e rvl-ren I flyw-ith some pilots, t1-reyknow other pilots - it helps if you can get lecor-r-rlnended frorn one glolrp of
pilots to another." Yet, even
if
a
Éaovel'nn-ìent says yes to KatsLl',s feqLlest
to fly in theil rnilitar-y jets, it is the pilots tl'iemselr,es who actr-rall1, þ2vs the last wold. "Usr-rally, I try to cleal u,ith the pilots filst, to discnss wl-rat I want to
orchestrates tlie aerial pl-rotogfaphic is always my nunbel one concern. If the pilots feel tl-rat you're dzrngerous you'11 never have a ch:rnce to fly with ther-r-r i've been doing this for a long tirne and I knou, r,vhat they can clo, and lvl'iat the1. 6¿¡'¡. To captule these planes on film is cliffelent from normal flying, bnt I never ask them to clo an¡hing
balletwhich follows. "Safety
stupid.
"Before every flight
I
spend an
hour detailing to the pilots everything
I want, how I s/ant them to fly. Everything fron-r take off tq landing." At tìr¡res Katsu's jet flies as close as one
in
his
of choice
are
metre from other fighters formation.
I(atsu's cameras
Nikon, Canon and Pentax. "If I'm flying
in fonnation I take two camelas. If you're productive yoll can take r]]aybe five rolls But if your're flying solo, and
clo, and find a suitable timing. Tl'ren I
deal with tl-re headquartels." Katsu feels that the golden age of air'-to-air pl'rotoglaphy may encl dr-re to cost festraints. "In the late 1970s, it u'as easy to fly n,ith tl-re An-rericans, and I was able to lear-n many things at that time. Evely lirne Illele was a nlilitlr)/ x¡r exer( jse n'ith the US Ail Force, they would be happy to pLlt a photo-journalist in the
back seat of the ailclaft. That was tl'ieil policy. Becanse if the photojoulnalists couldn't fly, they couldn't rlake a detailed report and the US Air Force was vely conscious of pr-rblic l'e1ations. "
Tl-rat
policy, however',
encled abrr-rptly in early 1980s. Nøith the Cold
\ú/ar over', military accountants l-¡ecame ûìore a\vare that it costs
If ;zcru're in a 1oo¡> erzerytl-rinÉl loose qzill be hr,rded aror-rncl tl-re cockpit qzith slre'àt force
the technical side. "i like to lneet people when I [ravel. Even the
negotiations to convince the
autliorities to fly me is son-rething I enjoy It's a challenge. It's lr-iuch mole interesting to fly rvitl-r diffelent people than jr-rst different ahcnft "Eacli countly has diffelent types of pilots. The American pilots al'e very n'ruch like the image in tlie Top Gun filn'i, especially the Air Force. T1-rey are vel'y proud of theil wolk. The
Flench ancl Itâlians are rnore intel'ested in the pliotography. If
makes a big difference." Though Katsu has witnessed fatal air crashes involving pilots who were friends, he has no fears and says that the pilots he flies with are among the best in the wor'ld. No matter how n-ruch he's flown, Katsu still gets a tl-rlill out of being the vely first to photoglaph a new aircraft. "In 1990 I pl-rotographed the Soviet Air Force in the air for the first time l-rad
clone it before, at least no non-Russi¿rn
fol
What's cooking
tl-rey've heald of yotu'nalne they treat yoLl as a professional equal. But in the States, if you're not a pilot . . . Well. It
and that r'"'as exciting. Nobody
thele will be a lot of invelted and negative Gs, I only take one cafirera. Otherwise, if you're in a loop ever)/thing loose will be hulled aronnd the cockpit with great folce. " Large format cameras are only
seerns to relish the hr-tman aspect of his work as lliuch, if not rlore, thzrn ¿Llso
photographer." So far, the only countryw4-rich has reflrsed Katslr's request to photograpl i their aircraft in action has been China. "I applied for permission from the Chinese embassy in Tokyo, before going to the Zhr-rhai Air Show They never leplied "
KatsLr sometimes
accepts
con'irnercial ailclaft clients sucl-i
as
Boeing. "Tl'ie difference witl'r photographing airlinefs is tl'iat you firove arollnd tl-rem - you go nnder and over - r-rsually in a small jet, like the T-37 trainel'." He admits that it
O
;nå'
I " i;i,"ï," : fl ;;'; "".i sornetimes feel as though you are working in a vacuum. The food plepaled in the kitchen is intended to please the people in the restallrant, but because yol.r're in amongst the stoves rather- than ottt amongst the tables, you selclom get to gauge the reaction at the time. For this reason we're very dependent on what people tell us about tl-ieir dining
too strong to lift tl're mirror. " Because he only works in good s/eather and flies at the san-ie speeds as his subjects no special higl-r-speed fihn is reqr-rired.
hardly colrpares with captuling
that we can clo something abor,rt, br,rt
figl'rters on filn-r. "Actually, evetybody can fly alongside an airline ancl take pictr-rres. They don't neecl me to do
n-iost
'ù(/l'iat does it feel like to dive at near slrpersonic speeds? "I hat¡e to say, it's cluite different from a rollel'coaster ride Tl-re pull of gravity is continuons and tr-ruch strongel'. It's
that."
smile. "If just one person says n(),
llot
then it's no." Once pelrrt
But it's still fun."
horl,errer,
ission is given,
it is largely
Katsu u,'ho
as
colrfortable
as a
l'oller-coaster'.
Despite his enthr,rsiastl for
modern aviation technology, Katsl-l
easier - yor.r can do everything fron-i a
cl'iairl"
@
of food is valiety.
different responses - but both of thern
Some problems are easy to rectify. If you order a steak done medium and it comes back medium rare, that's easy to fix. It can be cooked more. By all means send it back and we'll sort it olÌt as quickly as we can, br,rt the most common complaint in may restalrrants is that food is being overcooked, and we tly hard to avoid that. As a lule of thumb we cook meat and fish. just a little over mediulr'i rare - if you urant it closer to medium orweil done, just tell us. If you have views yolÌ want to air there are rraLious ways of letting us know what they are. I'm aronncl the club a lot and I'm always prepared to listen to what anybody has to say. The best way thougl-r is to fill in tl'rose collment cards. That gives r,rs sornething in black and white to react to. It's your club and we need yor-rl feedback. If you really l-rave enjoyed son'rething - or- íf yotr haven't - q/hy not fill in a comment
in different ways are helpftrl.
'We
need to know what you think.
You can't please everyone all the time, but we do try to please most of you most of the time, and all of you at least some of it. If you do have special request or pleferences
for you is that there is no accounting
people like the food, hardly anybody tells you. Curiously enough the same is true wl-ren they don't. In just over
been qlrite varied. Some ane
for taste. If you don't like son'rething
corlplirentsr solrle are complaints
that doesn't necessarily mean there is anything objectively wronfl with it.
of them take the form of
people's personal opinions about the
way food sl-rould be. That's fine, but the truth is that
One of the most colrflr.lon cornplaints in any restaurant is tl'rat sornething has been plepaled "the wrong \ /ay". Very often that is the
of Tl-re Collespondent s/ere a classic example of that - one member'
opinion, not an objective assessrnent. \ü/e still want to heal that view, but evely chef has a style, and whatever' tl're dish no two kitchens are Éloing to prepal'e it tl'ie same way. Tl'ie CaesalSalad here will not be the sarie as at
was enthusiastic about the clianges made in tl're Main Dining Room over'
any othel restalrrant in town, but that doesn't lnean that any of those
no two people have exactly tl-re sarne tastes on seasoning, pr-esentation,
or even the tetlperature food is selrred at. Two letters in the last issr-re
salads are necessarily flawed - they're diffelent, ancl a big part of the joy
jr-rst
restaLlrant, same rrrenu, totally
Mind yor: the con'iments have
Years of wolking in restaurant kitchens has taught me that when
bnleaucracy," Katsu laments. "Yotr have to apply first to the embassy. Then the er-r'ibass1, 6e¡¡2çts the foreign
Occasionally, KatsLl Tokr,rnaga even pl-rotoglaphs aircraft on the ground, as he once <lid as a boy in Tokyo. "It's not nearly as exciting as air-to-ail- photography, but it's a lot
Same
five montl'rs in the club I've had fewer than 20 comments cards.
experlences.
"gentle flying" KatsLr notes. "If you fly at more tItan4.5 Gs, the shutter won't wolk bec¿ruse the gravitational folce
pl'ess centl'e. Tl]en tl're press officer' l-ias to contact tl-ie Departr-r'ient of State, ancl tlie State I)epartment contacts the l)epartment of l)efence. There s about 20 people in the chain, ancl evel'yone lias to sa1. ye.s, says Katsu u,'ith a grirn
to like any of them.
we want to know about them, and we can handle a few con'rplaints. If you l'iave a problem with a clish, then call the waiter over and say so. If we can fix it we wil1. If it needs replacing, we'll replace it. \Øe want you to eat food that yolr like, but one thing to bear in n'iincl q,hile we're trying to produce that
tl-rousands of dollars evely tilne even a single jet fighter goes up "In tl-re States now there's a lot of
is
the last feq' months, anotl'rel didn't
seem
October 7L)9f THE
CoRRISPoI\IDENT
of tl're best looking antiqnarian u-orks on Hong Kong I f-iaIe yet seen. ancl I hope he hzrsn't lost sales to the kind of
Hacker takes on history
icliot that
Reviewed by Robin Lynam
ale cellrin crrllings abotrl ftr.,. I u'lr¡cll tlre crllecl cìo wellro keep
if
tl'iey wisf i to renain part of tl're
con\/e1'sation
at cocktail
par-ties.
Inspector of taxes is one of these Rat catcl'iel' is another, ancl u'ell up in tl're
pantheon,I'm afraid,
is
local l'ristorian.
The local historian stancls in lelation
to the leal histor-i:rn in lor-rghly tl-re relation of a Chr-rr-ch of Englancl lay pr-eachel to the Alchbisl-rop of Canterbtrry. Knou'n for' 1-ris \\'o1'1n's e 1 e view of tl'ie past and
Hâving rlade the transition from artist n-ho writes a bit to li.ritel who occasionally cloes a bit of art ol design, Artl-ur is to be congratulated on harrinÉl learnecl the important lesson thzrt 1'ou c¿rn't sencl good matelial lound too lnany t1lnes.
There is a certain amottnt of overlap in dre content of these trl,'o books blrt it is r"'ell worth har.ing both of then an)-\ ra\'. Notq.'ithstanding its title Arthut" Haclaer's
'úanchai is leally
his passionate lnslstence on
a
mini history, of Hong Kong as a vn-hole q'itl'i a
special emphasis on that nebulously
talking endlessly ¿rbout its minntiae,
he is ¿rhlost aln'ays bestavoided. Unless
bounclecl area.
\ü'/anchai bargill u,itl-r the healt of gold rnay u.ell be impossible to find today, but the "Angels of W'ancl'rai" dr-rling tl-re Second Vor'ld W'ar were cleally laclies of ¿r different stalnp. They have an hononrable place in the storl u,'hic1'r Arthul dr,rly alots them. He spends, per-haps, a little mol'e tirne on the Suzie \íong br-rsiness than a local reader' wor-rld q,ish, but tliis book is publishecl
asons fol this. One is
-1
R,rrr .l)/ror1r¡rr,¡riri. Ilooftl
n-ryths u,ill
quality
fol a hi.stolian and Philip
Bol.'r'ing u'ill doubtless be glateful fol justice clone to his ancestor', Sir Jol'in, and his Gleat Prava
finally looks set to becorle a realiq.. On the whole
,,l'1lI I860.
althor-rgl'r
fzrir'l1'
eady stage
in
- will r'ecognise the tone and content of his books. They reacl like good conr.ersation, and ale packed
with obscure yet
interesting infolr-nation presentecl u.ith eng¿rging
goocl hur-r-ronr HarrinÉ{ a sense of httt-t-lottr is one t1-re
qualities tliat sets Arthur apart
of his
tlainspottir-rg colrntel'pal'ts Eacl-r of these books offel's ser.eral lar-rghs pel page, along
flor-r-r r-r-rost
point
u.ith nuggets of painstalcingll' gleaned and unr-rtterably' obscure information which, rathelthankillthe subjectstone clezrd as is r,rsna11.v the case, somehos' bring it to life THE CORRf,SP0NIIENT Ocrober 199-
Al'thr-rl rl'r'ites
of the players in
Hong Kong and \ù/anchai's past - from Gor,'efno|s to pirates to baf girls - as thor-rg1-r
he hacl knon'n
tl'ren-r all
Press Club nevel'\\'ent bankr-r:pt is one of tü,'ancl-iai's most insolllble m)'steries
It is not only in existence todal'but
Hong I(ong
personally. In the case of a felr. of the last lot quite clear'ly he l-rad. He begins u.ith the Stone Age and ends r-ith his cantious pledictions for tlie year 2010. Pliol to citing 13 possible scenarios for tl-re futr-u'e
he offels us "Hacker's Lau.":
'Vhater.'el 1,ou pledict abont Hong
Kong's fr-rtule u'ill be n'r-onp¡'. That at least is alnost certainly corl'ect. His rlzrin concel'n l-iou'er.'er is the past, ancl here he puts a fe\\'common misconceptions in their place. The
is
- and tl-rat he gets the title of zr poem by Alexander Pope wrong on paÉle 110, but doubtless this is because the British Council's copv of the great Ar.rglrstan's Collected Poems llzls l'tcen s¡ippetl to Hanoi. Having made his caleer shift Artliur has steaclfastly reftrsed to get invoh,.ed in tlie design of his books, but sensibly made an exception for' Hong Kot'tg' A Rare Pbotogrøphic RecorcJ of the 1860s The result is one
sctil.orc
taking
hct¡tp1,
RÌgltl: The Qtreett o.f tbe Winner Bcn in Iuard Ro¿tcl Silk scrcen ¡nint b.1'
Arlhttr Hacker. 1987
jimrlla, ancl looks like it" - and fen' coulcl argue witl-r his cìescription of Sir'
little suspect on page 107 - "\ú'hy the
flor-rlishing"
Anterictnt
Fu
Nol'man Fostel"s Hongkong and Shanghai Bank Bnilcling as an "offshore on-shore oil rig" bttt I har¡e to t:rke issne with l-ris praise of I ÀI Irei's Bank of China as '.splenc1icl" Of al1
will annoyhim, tl'iat his plescience is a
the
er.ening
of
I u''i11
out to the author, simply because it
Top.
stl.tps it1 Lockhcn'l Rr¡ctcl. 1966
desclibes as "Hong Kong Electric's depressing sub-station' rt4ricl-i now
and meticulous on
er.er chattecl to
r-nore colourfr-rl episodes
rragnificent o riginal Zetland Hal1, once just donrn the roacl fi'ou tl-re Club. to argr-re tl-iat u'hat Arthr,tr col'rectl)¡
ir-r-rplor.ement. He also makes se nse on buildings sncl-i as Gor¡ernt-nent Hor-Lse 'rebttilt ì 11- a,Japanese railu.:r)¡ engineer, Seichi
the small details,
hin-r
On the v4role I an-i in s)rmpathy with this version of the man It would be difficult for any sensible person looking at Sir Geor-ge Clevell)''s
occupies the site is any kincl of
book is sound on the big pictr-rre
bal about the
fire earll'
tl-re
Kong. Anyboclyu,'lio has
ideally at a
photograpl
contelllpol'a1fr
reaclers less fanriliar'
Fair n-rindedness is an irpofiant
trs, is Arrìrur'. tllc otìrel rs that his sr-rbject is Hong
of this locale's histoly -
Territolies, The book is n'orth having for the
\X/anchai's best-knou,'n tale.
that Arthur', God help
alor-rncl the
tl-ie cir.ic br-rildings of the ela deplessingl), feu' of u'hich fiaye snn.ived - to days zit the laces ancl lillage houses out in tl-ie Neu'
plesr,rmably u.ant to knou,'mol'e abor-rt
in the UK and
n'ith Hong Kong's
HONG KONG
Thel'e al'e t$'()
This book presents excellent reprocluctions of a fine set of \-ictorian albr-rr-nen prints - r'eac1 the intl'odr-tctior-i to fìnc1 out lr,hat this neans - and offels a fascinatingglin-rpse into zìspects ollile in ealll r'olonìallristolr langing fi'om panorarlas of tl-re l-ralbolrl and
is alone - sot'ne .surplisinp¡l1r photoÉaraphers appar:ently r-n¿rde tl-ieir'üra)/ oLrt east - but the real jo)' for ue is Arthur s colÌlmentarJr en face, He re r'r'e al'e introchrced to Hacker the critic of al'chitecture , ântiqLre and
Schen-ie u'hich
of conrse f-ie is Artl-rur Hacker'. re
books accolcling to
publishing only a softback edition
Hong l{ong: A Rare Plroto Recold of the 186Os t>y Arthr- r Hacker, rX/attis Fine Art Arthl r Hacker's \X/anchai by Arthr,rr Hacker, Odyssey
qr-riet
r-¿rh,res
the clensity of tl-ieil co\/ers b)
s abundance of ugly effiçs builclings, that one still str'ikes rne as tbe single biggest blot on a tortr,u'ed
r-rlban landscape
Botl'r of these books are cìesigned to be easr. to pick up. clip into ancl set clou'n again Actnalltt u,hat Arthul has come Lrp r.itl-i are page turner-s I leacl tlrror-rgl-r t\\'o at a singìe sitting and I sLrspect )'oLt
\\'ill probabll'do the szulle
Both zrre available fi-on'r tlie
.
FCC
reception clesk
@
7bp: A grouþ ol cill tbe tI
i Lfe
renl
Co
nl trcLclores
en tp I o.)'e(l b-y Eu rol te cnt
Hongs. nr Hottg Kcntg Rrgltt:
Itt
1B9B ll:¡ere tt,ere
645 riclesha.us otr Hcntg Iior tg Islcr ttcl'l u)ent-l' J)ect rs lctter tbere u,ere ot'er 2 000 October 1991 THE
CoRRf,SPOIIIIIEI{T
THE FCC BOOK 1997 . EYEWITNESS ON ASIA - UP TO 1997 AND BEYOND . 248 PAGES .614 IMAGES . A COLLECTORS' ITEM
+E-TT#TC*
t;
* -t-Æ
{
Jim Bennett
,i
Award-winning TV newsman
s
-d
A it",.",r ingintlrct S\arydrrling l. \V',-.rr'ld \\'rl llas a grrnrìrr's nì:rtc
. CHRIS PATTEN BEAR W|TÍ\¡ESS
To THE lI{TEGRITY OF PROMISES FOFìEWORD. BARRY GFìINDROD FROM C¡-IUNGKING TO HONG KONG FORD REPRESENTINGA PROFESSION, ACAPSULE HISTORYOFTHE FOREIGN CORRESPONDENTS'CLUB.ALBERTRAVENHOLT/ASHLEY NOT A MOB THE LAST SURVIVOR OFTHE FCC I.OUNDERS RECOUNTS THE CLUB.S EARLY YEARS. KEVIN SINCLAIR EDDIE TSENG: OT{E oF THE FrRST TELEGRAN/S FBOM THE FRoNT LtNE'DEREK DAVrs MEMoRIES oF JoHN le cnRnÉ THE FCc AND THE HoNoURABLE SCHOOLBOY . SAUL LOCKHART TI-IE FCC'S FINEST HOUR RESCUING A VIETNAMESE JOURNALIST FRO|V HONG KONG'S. REFUGEE CANIPS . WALTER LOGAN MY EVENING WITH ZI.IOI,,' ENLAI MAO TAI WITH THE REVOLUTIONARIES . AL KAFF PING.PONG DIPLOMACY RICHBURG WHENCHINAOPENEDITSDOORS.JAMESIVILESWHEREWEWEREWRONGCOVERINGTIANANIVENSQUARE.KEITHB EIVIBRACING FOREIGN BABES CHINA WARY OF CROSS.CULTURAL DATING. BUT DELIGHTS IN TV SHOW. PËTER SEIDLITZ NO FUTURE, BUT QUITE HAPPY CHINA FEPORTING . KABIN I\4ALMSTFìOM FORKED LOGIC, TWISTED TONGUE ESSENTIAL JOURNO-SPEAK FOR GREATER CHINA HACKS . KARL WILSON JUNK tsAY THE KUO[/INTANG WERE HERE " PHILIP BOWRING TIINES OF TRANSITION FACING A FED.CHJP FUTUBE . ARTHUR HACKER TAKING POSSESSION OF POSSESSION STBEET THE CHALLENGE TO FIND POLITICALLY CORBECf STREET.NAMES . HANS VRIENS A TALE OF TWO HONGS HONG KONG'S FIF1ST OPIUIVI-TRADERS ARE HOSTAGES TO THE FUTUREAND PFISONERS OFTHE PAST. STEPHEN VINES JOURNALISM IN HONG KONG COLONIAL PFESS FREEDOMSTHOUGH LIN4ITED WILL BE LOST. EI\¡ILY LAU 1997.A OUESTION OF FIONOUB HOW BRITAIN IS CHEATING HONG KONG.VAUDINE ENGLAND HONG KONG'S GANG OF FOUR WOMEN IN THE COLONY'S POLITICS.ANDREA KOPPEL HONG KONG JOUFNALISTS AFTER'9T INTEBVIEWWITH LU PING. DIRECTOR OF HONG KONG AND I\4ACAU AFFAIFS OFFICE. MANTIN C M, LEE SELF.CENSOBSHIP IS THE SILENT ENEMY AND ANOTHEF WORD FOR FEAR. CLARE HOtt|NGWORTH FRONT LINE MY BAPTISN/ OF FIBE: OUTBREAK OF WORLD WAR ll . ANTHONY LAWRENCE FBOM OUR OWN COREBSPONDENT IHE LONELINESS OF A LONG DISTANCE RADIO REPORTEF . PETER ARNETT ENROUTE TO ASIA HOW I WALKED INTO JOURNALISIvI . TIZIANO TEBZANI A DEAFENING SILENCE SAIGON'S LAST DAY. JON SWAIN RIVER OF TIME CAN/BODIAN DREAMS AND NiGHTMARES.JONATHAN SHAFP DOTS, DASHES ANDTHE DAWN DIP SON4E OFTHE MODÊS AND WOËS OF COMMUNICATIONS IN THE PRE-COMPU'IER AGE . SANDRA BUFTON WATCHING MARCOS FALL THE GBAVITY OF HISTOBY. RODNEY TASKEF BRINGING DOWN A DICTATOFSHIPWATCHING THE GENERALS.TONY CLIFTON TODAV'S YOUNG JOURNALISTABESO DAMN SERIOUSTHE LEGACY OFWOODWARD AND BERNSTEIN. PETER CHARLESWORTH IN SEAFCH OFTHE BIG PICTURE BEWABE OF PHOTO EDITORS WITH VISIONS. ERICH FOLLATH NOW IT IS OUR TURN INTERVIEW WITH MALAYSIA'S PRIME IVlINISTER MAHATHIR MOHAMAD . PHILIP BOWI]ING PRESS FREEDOM PUT YOUR IVONEY WHERE YOUR IIOUTH IS . RICHARD HORNIK THE LIMITS OF CONFUCIANISM WHAT ABE THESE ASIAN VALUES? . STUART WOLFENDALE ASIA'S THFIVING MONARCHICAL BUSINESS WHERE FAITH IS MORE THAN THEYSAW THEYRECOLLECTED ABAO FANTASY.DAVIDGAFCIATI-IEFCCONTOURMISSTIBE-TANDENLIGHTENMENT.THEYCAME CHI REUNION TWO DECADES ON . VAUDINE ENGLAND CONVERSATIONS BEHIND THE BAR THE SFNIOB STAFF OF THE FCC . FCC PFESIDENTS . FCC GUESTS . FCC MEMBERS .. FI'iOTOS FROlv4 THE FCC ARCHIVES . EDDIE ADAI\IS . JOSEPH BECK . JACK BIRNS . WERNER BISCHOF. LARRY BURROWS. FOBERT CAPA . PTTER CHARLESWORTH . RAY CBANBOURNE. BOB DAVIS. GREG DAVIS . RICHARD DOBSON.TERRY DUCKHAM. HUGH VAN ES.JOHN GIANNINI. GREG GIFARD " GERHABD JOREN. KEES. STEVEN KI']IPP. JAN tAN,lBERT. LEONG KATAI . ROBIN MOYER. ROBERT NG. BASIL PAO. DANTE PERALTA. ROBERT PICCUS. KYOICHI SAWADA. SIEPHEN SHAVER . DAVID THURSTON . C, TILLYER. PETEB TURNLEY. N4ICHAEL WOLF. EDWARD WONG .. PUBLISHED BY STEFAN BEISNER & 151 RESCHKE.THEFOREIcNOORRESPONDENTS'CLUB 2LOWERALBEFTROAD,HONGKONG.PHONE+8522521 FAX +852 2868 4092.. EDITED BY PAUL BAYFIELD. VAUDINE ENGLAND. SAUL LOCKHARï AND HUBERT VAN ËS
KAI
1
SPECIAL CHRISTMAS OFFER HK$250.00 AVAILABLE FROM FRONT OFFICE FOREIGN CORHESPONDENT'S CLUB 2 LOWEB ALBERT ROAD, HONG KONG
Gez6-ree7)z
:rboard the clestroyer llSS Rensh:rw in the South Pacific,Jin'i tser-rnett re tLrrnecl toJackson Higli Scl-rool, r'her-e he got 1-ris first taste of jour:nzrlism as a repol'tel' for tl-ie scl-iool ne\vspaper.
After' leaving tl're lJnivelsity of Rochester NY in the eady 50s 1-re embarked on hrll-tilne journalism, first repofiel' on tl-ie S1'racuse N1- Hel ald
wzLs
alound fonr months in Slovenia to intlodnce the u,ays of a modeln
ser.el'¿il
repolting skills, he rvas
Former VOA Correspondent
follol.ecl b).the ElP¿rso (Texas) HeralcÌ Irost ancl the Los Angeles Helald Exar-ninel'
Jor-rrna1,
It
leputJt¡()n lrs :t lelei isi(rn newsr'ììJn par excellence that lecl him to his final folzry' into tl-re T\- ne\1/s wars as a consultant fol CNIF (Centlal Er-u'opean ÀIedia Enterplises Gror-rp). He spent
newsrooln to tl-re st¿rff of POP-TV .filli cliecl of czrncer, leaving behind liis r.ife Bevel'l), claughtel Clzrr-rdia, sons Scott and Nlatthew ancl :r gleat rranlr f¡lg¡cls arouncl tl-re globe
2rs 2ì
thele, alter l.inning
awaLcls for his
Emn-r1'Au,ard for his sclipt fol a PBS clocr-rrrentaly Et'tuit"ot'nnental Heroes. In the spling c>f 1996 it was his
offeled a job as ne\v.s corresponclent fol I{NBC-T\', a local affiliate of NBC. NBC sent .|irn to Sc¡r-rth East Asia in 1968, url-iele he correr-ed the \/ietnan-r fol ser.eral )re ars Dlrling tl'ris time he u'as "poacl-recl' b,v ABC Nerrn-s ancl
'W'ar
rlovecì to Hong I{ong with his farnily,
s'fiere he joinecl the FCC ]n 1973. He cor.elecl tl-ie region for ABC, inclr-rcling ser¡eral stints in Beirr-rt ch-rr-ing that li.ar', till he ancl his family leturnecl
to tl-ie US in L9la After' his retlrrn he became Execntir;e Neu's Dir-ectol for \X-GHP-TV in Higl-r Point, NC, n'hiclr \\'as not exzrctll,'tl-re high point ir-r l-ris life . He left then-i to join \íINK-T\'(a CtsS affiliate) in Fort N{vers, }'lc¡rida, ancl br,rilt their news department intc) the best in the le¡¡ion.
He retir-ed in 1989, br-rt couldn't quite give it all up, so he helped several smallel'TY stations to spl'Llce up tl-reirl-ieurs ciepaltllìents, till he becalle "Lee Counq. Public lnfor llation,/Film Liaison Officer" in Fort Nl)¡ers. He again triecl tcr "r'etire", but for,rncl himself t'r'iting and conslrlting for the filu plodr,rctior.r colrpan)' of an olcl fi'iend He \\-on an
.
Jím Miller writes: Of the olcl colrespondents corps that in the 1970s gatlierecl faithfr-rlly at the FCC e ach clal' zrndiornigl-rt, I seem to be the onl1'one q,ho in lecent)/ears spent considerzrble
time *'ith
Bennett. tl-ansferlecl fi'on-r Neu,l)elhi to take overtl-re Hong Kong VOA bureau ancl w¿ts introducecl tcr Jin-r
In I97i I r.as
-|in'r on n'ry filst r.'isit to the Club. \X¡e soon bec¿rme close friencls.The filst stol),'\\'e correrecl together s/as Indian PÀ{
Indila Gandhi's failed re-election
bid Then u,e.*.eLe in Ralr,alpindi after Pakis¡¿rni PÀ{ Zr-rlfikalAli Bhutto locked
up al1 opposition leadels in Islamabad.
a
house
ir-r
\(/e rvel'e staying at the lnterContinental. Jim and I enteled the lift one evening to fincl oulselves in the
colnpany of tl-ie
Iril of Pizarro, a
rnerctirial political ancl spiritual leacler', u'ho lvas a boyl'iood lriencl of Bhutto. He, in l-iis in-rmaculate lr,'l-iite suit and tr-rlbzin, u,'as sipping a cl-rocolate maltecl He tolcl us that he u'as being
helcl plisoner', r-rnclel gr-rald
ancl
told me to tlu'n on
1ny
recorclel and he
wolrld delirrer an impol'tant
lnesszìge
to the worlcl. I ciicl and lie shouted into
rnicropl-ione, "Bhutto is a t'eal nr-tt". His final n ords to r.rs were, "Bhuttcr will be hanged". He u.or-rld be pr-or.ed, of course, absolutely correct Jir-r-r zrnd tl-ie
I held or,rr colnposlrre until we told hir-r good nigl-rt, got off, ancl tl-ren br-oke down laughing for a long tilne Jin-r zrnd Ber,erl) l'eturnecl to the States in 7977 md I in 1978. \y'e soon
le-established contact. In 1981 I retiled to the Florida Kevs at about the sarne time l-re became News l)irector of t1-re CBS-TV station in Folt Nl_vers He began to r.isit n-re regularly to escape the rolrtine. \X/e u'ould go deep-sea fìshing in the Gulf Stleam ol'u'alk the beach About four,vears ago he called n-re to say l-re hacl prostate cancer ancl s.'as unclergoing cliemotl-rerapy. Aftel a fer'r,' nonths tl-ie situation seenecl to be undel contlol. Last 1.s¿¡ he phonecl tcr
sal llrc ( Jn( er'\\ JS tlllcxlcning lgain. Tl-ien last Apl'il he carle o\¡er to spend
a u.eek ancl u'as \¡eÐ/ Lrpbeat. Thr: doctors hacl advised him he u'as better. Three montlis later Rev callecl tcr say -Jirrr lr.ishecl to speak to rr.re He soltndecl terribll. r¡'s¿¡ .tcl rl.as heayily seclatecl. He gar.e me the bacl neu.s His doctol's l-r¿rd found a separate principal cancer, tl-r:rt 1-rad ah'eacly' spleacl fi'on-r kidnel.s to h-rngs to liver' I asked him r¡'h¿rt else I're n'as told and he szrid that with h-rck he had about a ),ear- Thlee weeks later f-ie died. .lirrr's lrrirlcssionrtlisnl solììelilìlcs r-nacle hir-r-l seen-i gn-rff zrnd clen-randing,
it al1 he u'as a pr,rshor.el u,'ith a big he alt. I knou'tl-iat, ancl I shall miss hin-r. br-rt r-lnder-ne¿,rth
@
restricted to the hotel b1'Bhr-rtto He
TEL:.2521 1511 FAX:2868 4092 r-lrtrrlrur
ì99-
THE CORRf,SPOI{DEI{T
rl
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CanOn 10/F.,
Canon Hongkong Company Limited
M¡rrorTower,61 Mody Bd., Kowloon, Hong Kong
Tel: 2884 77BB Fax: 2568 8505 email. Krol.lasia@attmail com
Services/Products:
Stephen G Vckers Senior Managing Director Managing Director (Operations) David W Holloway
Canon cameras and v¡deo camcorders
Sole D¡stributor: JOS Consumer Electronics
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Address:21lF, Comwall House, Ta¡koo Place,979 Klng's Rd, Quarry Bay, Hong Kong Senior
l\y'anager
N/rAlbert
Assistant Product lvlarketing
KROLL ASSOCIATES (ASIA) LIMITED 906-91I Mount Parker House, llll King's Road, Taikoo Shing
lvlanager
EØ.ãË
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l\ils Louise
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Services:
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2565 2008
Internarional Risk Management Consultants I nte rnational C o rp o rate Inv e stig alo rs
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B us ine s s I nte IIi g ence
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Macäu Government lnformation Services I
Tel: 853-332887 853-332886
For Hong Kong trade statistics, information and
Fax:853-336372
analys¡s, fast, call TDC's Media Communications
lnternational Section at2584-4333 Ext 7489.
Corporate Communications Coryorate Affaiß
Stephen W.
Manager
Officer
1,
lnternet: Http://www.macau.gov,mo E-mail: lnfo@macau,gov.mo
Clerk
Pun Kenmy Y¡p
lrene
2524 5031 2842 4704
Assistant Public Relations Marketing
Manager
Communications
Jessica Chan Enquiry : 2564 9333
Direct
Fax
2842 4629
: 2564 9309 : 2856 5004
lnchcape Pacific Lim¡ted is the Greater China regional arm of lnchcape, the international distribution group
lxi*onl
Shriro
(H.K)
2/F, Hutchison House, Central, Hong Kong Tel: 2524 5031 Fax: 2810 6586 lnternet: http://www,shriro.com
Director Manager
Manager Phillip Bruce Manager Terri Lai Enquiries (24 hours)
Public Relations Media Relat¡ons
28247700
Media
28247152
Sole agent of Nikon cameras, Hasselblad cameras, Linhof cameras, Elinchrom
ROBIN LYNAM - Features on travel, food, wine and spirits, music and literature. Speeches and corporate copy writing also undedaken Tel:2827 2873 Fax:2827 2902 MICHAEL MACKEY - Writer + Researcher, Politics, Economics & Business Tel: 2559 6037 Fax: 2575 3860 MELINDA E. PERSSON - Copywriting, proofreading & editing Tel. 2527 9970 Fax. 2528O720 EDWARD PETERS - Features, Travel, Profiles, Research. Many Asia Pacific photos Tel: 2328 2553 Faxi 2328 2554 E-mail :edpeters @ netvigator.com STEFAN REISNER - freier Korrespondent für deutschsprachige Medien Tel: 2982 0989 Fax: 2982 6048 E-mail:sreisner@asiaonline.net CHARLES WEATHERILL -Writer, Literary Services, Researcher Tel: 2524 1 901 pager: 7 3OO 7 37 3 E-mai : charlesw @ netvag itor.com STUABT WOLFENDALE - Writer and columnist Tel: 2804 1925 Fax: 2804 1975 Los Angeles (1-818) 405 0879
Ground Floor, 18A Stanley Street, Central, Hong Kong. Tel : 2526-0123 . Fax : 2524-9598 Managing Director Johnny Lee Lam Yan Hung Shop Manager 6o¡ot Enlargement
Terry Duckham/Asiapix Te!.25729544 Fax. 2575 8600 e-mail: asiapix@ hk.linkage.net
Blitz Video Works Ltd. François Bisson Director / Cameraman
I
FREELANCE PHOTOGRAPHERS
0887 Fax: 2866 221 2 E-mai I : bobdavis @ netvi gator.com JOHN GIANNINI - News, people, travel, commercial TeL2541 254O Fax.2541 4954 E-mail: giannini@fcchk.org
Crews, Transport, Fixers & equipment hire: Betacam Sp EFP/ENG Rigs in PAL & NTSC Mini DV in PAL & NTSC - Lighting, Sound ++
Phone/Tax: (852)25709722 Mobile: 9097 2766
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EDITORTAL . CORPORATE . INDUSTRIAL
Advertising, Portrait, Corporate, Still-life
Ray Cranbourne Photography Ltd.
l7 Old Bailey St., l/F, Central. Hong Kong Tel: 2.530-4812/2541-6300 Fax: 2536 4214 Mobile:90995056
YY Mansion, Hong Kong Tel: (852) 25248482 Fax: (852) 2526'7630
Developing Hong Kong's new airport at Chek Lap Kok
ARTHUR HACKER FCC L997 T-SHIRT
TRAVEL NETWORK LTD.
Contact Angelica Cheung or Mark Graham Tel: (852) 2191 743112191 9107 Fax: (852) 2191 1431 E-mail: angelica@asiaonline.net / mrg@asiaonline.net
Function;
u"
No 3sro86
HK$
L20.
00
This classic piece of Hacker memorabilia now ayailable directly from the FCC
MYANMAR.YANGON NIGHTS PACKAGE T997
NEWS Include: . Roùnd trip economy class air ticket on Ì\Iyânmar Airwâys International . One and half daJ optionaì tour'3 nights hotel accommodâtion ât your cho¡ce rvith daily Amer¡can breakfast . Roûnd trip Yangon Àirport-Hotel transfer. Myanmar Toursit visa . Hong Kong A¡rporl
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Any enquiry or booking please contact: Gigi / Alene At our hotline: 2845 4545 I 2368 8231
Rm 1006, HK Arts Centre, 2 Harbour Road, Wanchai Tel: 281'7'7611 Fax: 2817 1618
E-maìl : Newsasia@asiaonline.net
CAMERA CREV/S. EDITORS. EDITING SATELLITE FACILITIES PRODUCERS. FIXERS PACKAGED STORIES . LIBRARY FOOTAGE Contact: Vivian McGrath
THE CORRXSPONIIEI|T October. 1997
Editorial Features, Advertising, Corporate and Commercial Photography throughout S.E. Asia and the Pacific
Feature writing, fixing for overseas media, colloquial interpretation (English, Cantonese, Mandarin) photos and photo sourcing.
4 DAYS / 3
Digital Retouching & Output
Tel:2851 0493 Fax:2815 2530 E-mail: ¡hc@netvigator.com
THE
COLOR SIX LABORATORIES LTD.
.
ARTHUR HACKER - Auihor & Historian Tel: 2987 9043 Faxi 2987 9072 JEFF HESELWOOD - Automotive lndustry & Motor Sport Writer
FIRST WORD MEDIA CONSULTANCY
2824 7705
P,L. Poon Jimmy Wan
studio flash system, Epson LCD portables TV Agent of Epson multi-media projector
Services: Film Processing
DAVID THURSTON - News, people, wacky digital podraits for 1997 Tel: 2524 4381 Fax: 2525 O77 4 E-mai I : th u rston @ asiaon line.net HUBERT VAN ES - News, people, travel, commercial & movìe stills Tel: 2559 3504 Fax: 2858'1721 E-mail: vanes@asiaonline.net
96 Pokfulam Road, 1iÆ, Flat B-2
AInPORT AUTHORITY
Ltd.
Managing Senior
DAVID BAIRD - Writing, Editing, Research, Photography Tel/Fax: 27927278 E-mail: baird@asiaonline.net
Tel : 2866
Kodak (Far East) Limited
\{ +E*tn*larnea
Kodak House 1, 321 Java Boad, North Point, Hong Kong
1041
Director
Macau
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lTth Floor, Standard Chartered Bank Building,4 Des Voeux Road, Central,
Corporate Affairs
Rua de S. Domingos, No.
853-574447
@ KEES
JENNIFER BOWSKILL - Specialising in portraits,fashion,events, Commercial & Corporate photography TeVFax.2547 6678 Pager:71 1 68968 #88Í18 BOB DAVIS - Advertising, corporate and editorial photography
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Photography -- News . fealures . Online TeL2547 9671 Fax. 2547 8812 E-mail: vovokees@as¡aonline.net
FREELANCE WRITERS
Providing a comprehensive serv¡ce throughout As¡a Pacif¡c
News & Feature Programming . Beta SP crews . Producers
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Fax: \A52), 2AO2 2687
October 1997 TEE
CoRRXSP0IIDDIIT
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FRANCOIS BISSON - 10 years in Asia PAL & NTSC Betacam rigs Documentaries, Corporates, News/Features Tel/Fax: (852) 2570-9722 Mobile: 9097-2766 RICHARD JONES - News & Corporate Video/Editing Tel: 2982 0508 Faxi 2982 1758
l/F Tien Chu Cornmercìal
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if yon have any photoglaphic requirements
Tel:25747878
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ARTHUR HACKER -Ad Caftoons Design Tel. 2987904Í, Fax.29879072 GAVIN COATES - Say it with a cartoon! Tel/Fax: 2984 2783
PUBLICATIONS
Paul J. Hicks
t¡g å'SI stvplg Pxoto
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Associates Ltd.
Smart, young consultancy for editorial, supÞlements and the fuli range of PR services. Currently specialising in travel and high tech areas - but we can handle anything.
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ÞTP ER RET9VCh'NG
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g Caribbean & Western Food Pan-Asian Cuisine & Dim Sum 3 i Bar. Live Music.Indoor & Outdoor Dining ó Opett Every Day . Ample Parking Available
a
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Real 4ro¿n¿enø Tood ar¿Ðaù4¿
Supg 9vt¡vt MVt tl¡tEÞtA - eÞ fì ¡ < ù{TR pgStgRS
We meet informally, usually on the first
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Wednesday of each month, at the Foreign Correspondents' Club, 2 Lower Albert Road, Central, 6-8pm All women interested in the publishing industry welcome -- contact us for further details
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ax. 2982 1 758 e-mail: theage@ hk.net
THE CORRf,SPOlmf,ilT October' 1991
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Authentic ltolion cuisine, to 3.00 pm ond ó.30 pm to 12.00 midnight
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Investment house SBC \Øarburg Dillon Read was kind enough to sponsol' a cocktail palty for the journalists attending tl-re'ùØorld Bank/International Monetary Fund meetings. The company's hospitality was enough to lure scol'es of hacks to the Main Dining Room, including the distinguished former BBC correspondent in India, Mark Tully.
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Call Soni 90828097
I
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Mqcøu comes to Hong Kong
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FREE LUNCH
MACAU INFORMATION BUREAU
a
The Correspondent requires freelance writers to cover the Club's lunches and
& MACAU TRAVEL TALK
speakers. Contact Paul BayfTeld at 25412540 or fax 2527 9843
Room 307, Yu Yuet Lai Building, 43-44 Wyndham Street, Central Tel: (852) 2869-7862 Fax: (852) 2536-4244
PROFESSIONAL CONTACTS The Professional Contacts page appears every month in The Correspondent and on the FCC Correspondent web site at >http://www.fcchk.org < . Let the world know who you are, what you do and how to reach you. There has never been a better time. Listings start at just $100 per month, with a minimum of a six month listing, and are billed monthly to your FCC account.
Wigs arrd Pens called to the bat CC veterans, Michael
his furry friend, which were strictly unconnected to the pursuit of law and order, from a pencil case to ahe a d-w a rme r- cu m- s c a 1 p -
Lintern-Sn'iith and Ted Thomas convened yet another gatheringof the \X/igandPens in September.
reliever.
i
The \Øig and Pens is a branch of the London clttb on
E
!
n2ünes@$100
E
small box
@
3lines
@ $150
$300x6mths / $250x11
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E
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4lines
@ $200
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Large box @ $600x6mths / $550xllmths
Large box w/ spot colour @ $700x6mths / $600x1lmths
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copy attached
columnist, spoke eloquently on what he imagines "A Day in the Life
The Strand which is freqnented by a group of Lawyers (\Øigs) and the Journalists (Pens). The Hong Kong \X/ig & Pen is held at
of a Judge" entails. He provided much of the audience's l'rilarity
the club's adoptive home, the FCC, every other month and
September's meeting featured
provides an opportlrnity for gLrests to engage in friendly banter, exchange gossip and enjoy a convivial glass or
two of wine. Part of the \Wig & Pen
tradition
is
to invite speakers to carly the banner
Address:
for- each of the professional
Signature:
persuasions, and provide the evening's entefiainment in the form of anecdotes,
For more information telephone 2512 9544 or fax 2575 8600
THX CORRESPOilDENT October 1997
Graeme Mackay, a Hong Kong barrister' is no stranger to the art of witing. Graeme did the honours for the'ùØigs
who
by speaking on what he perceives to be "A day in the life of a Journalist". ìùØhilst drawing a parallel between the legal and rnedia professions, both nse a "presentation of language in a way
satirical
which generates wealth", Gr¿reme ploduced his own wig to syrnbolise
comment often delivered at the fellow speaker's expense.
the versatility of a careel that "dispenses justice". He proposed several uses for
witty tales and the odd
Tim Harnlett, the well-known Post
South Cbina Morning
when he bravely ventured onto the subject of the cost of legal selvices in Hong Kong. Tim's final riposte was his analogy between lawyers and urban councils toilets, whichwas met with amusement - lawyers are like
Urban Council toilets: everyone knows they're there, but hopes they nevel'luve to use one. The next meeting
will be in
will reunite to enjoy an evening of r'âppor t, socialising and dr-inks on
January when the \Øigs and Pens
the FCC's
Velandah.
October"l997 TAÍ, CORRf,SP0IllIIEIllT
E
Lefi to right. The FCC's oldest actiue ntentbets, DauicJ Roads (#00Ð, Totqt lawrcnce @006),
Gtn,Searls (1tO52) and Maruitt Farkas (#004)
Lawrence of Asia Veteran correspor-rdent lfon;z La-uzrence celebrates l-ris 85t1-ì birthd'a¡z at the ch-rl> Hundleds of FCC rnembels, including some of the international jotu'nalism in last month as the Club celeblated Anthony Lawrence's 85th birtl-iclay. Cl-iris and Lavender Patten sent their regards from France. Telegrarns por-rred in fi'om all corners of the globe frorn absent rnernbels, alnong them, Donald and Daphne \Øise, Derek Davies and I'eter Seidlitz, conrreying affection and respect for a journalist whoses dispatches frc¡m Asia over the past 35 years set the standard. Tony Clifton, nou' 60 and still at Newsueel? where he's surlor-rnded by "childlen uùo were born afrel'I started" urged Tony to reveal his secrets. "Tony, please v'lite a booklet for the lest of us on hosr yoLr clo it," his message, relayed by MC Ster¡e Vines, ran. "Don't botl-ier, of cor-rrse, if ;re¡,r ¡..t yor-r have to begin: 'lead a clean life and give r-rp drinking'." It u-as Vernon Ran-i who summed it r-rp. He raised a toast to a man whotn, he declaled, would hencefortl-r be knou,n in tlie FCC and be1,o¡¿ nt cor-r'in'irrnity's rrrost venerable professionals, tuned
Photos by Aira Duckham & Hu van Es
"Lawlence of Asia" THE C0RRXSPONDENT October 1997
October' 1997 THX C0RRf,SP0IIIIEIIT
A montblJ, portrøít of FCC irrepløceøbles Local Needs. Local Response. Supporting educat on Protecting the environment Providing young people with
cultura and recreational ooporLuniLies.
Or
ganizing car
e
of the aged and disabled There are many ways to support Hong Kong
Forgl ongBan, is play ng rts
part Our aim is to contribute to a happy, healthy, secuTe future for everyone
rn
Hono Konq, younq and o
Guy Seads Before nost metlbets n'erc born. Not among thc 1'or,tng ones. Joumalist, clamn it
Nlcmber since: Age:
Profession:
Nationality: Lcast likeJy to
szr)':
Anerican Rring me a cllink.
likcll'to
s¿r)':
T'll I'iave coffee.
NÏost
Pltotograplced by Kees Metseløør Kodak (Far East) Limited Sponsolccì THI
CORR.ESPOM)ENT ()c Lol¡er 199-
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