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Government can't get its story straight on leaked TV licence document

Officials can't agree if document contradicting state's explanation of licence decision is real

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Secretary for Justice Rimsky Yuen

The government has given mixed messages over whether a leaked document - stating there was no justification for denying any of the three applicants free-to-air television licences - was a genuine paper discussed in the Executive Council.

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Secretary of Justice Rimsky Yuen Kwok-keung confirmed yesterday morning that the paper, three paragraphs of which were published by Chinese-language newspaper on Saturday, was "one of the documents" consulted by the government. Cable TV also obtained a document with the same text.

But just two hours later the Exco secretariat issued a statement saying the leaked material was "not from any Exco document".

Yuen's spokesman later denied the secretary had confirmed the document was an Exco paper, or whether it had been discussed in the Exco. "He just made a general remark," the spokesman said.

According to the two media outlets, the leaked text was taken from an internal government document dated from December last year and its content was discussed by Exco.

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"In the circumstances, we do not consider that undertaking further procedural steps or refusal to grant the approval in principle to any of the applicants is justified," one paragraph read.

The text also suggested that the public should be consulted if the government put a limit on the number of new licences.

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