RTHK staff union and Hong Kong journalists’ group get nod to launch ‘important freedom of speech’ court challenge over watchdog’s satire show warning
- Groups can challenge Communications Authority after judicial review application approved
- Watchdog previously said Headliner episode ‘denigrated and insulted’ police force
A Hong Kong court has granted an application for judicial review challenging a warning from the communications watchdog that led to the suspension of a long-running political satire show by the city’s public broadcaster.
The legal bid, jointly filed by RTHK’s Programme Staff Union and the Hong Kong Journalists Association, seeks to overturn a ruling by the Communications Authority that suggested the popular television show Headliner had “denigrated and insulted” the police force.
“It would be a very important court case concerning the freedom of speech in Hong Kong,” Gladys Chiu Sin-yan, the union’s chairwoman, said on Tuesday.
The authority said the programme had “denigrated and “insulted” the police, and the jokes were “factually inaccurate”.