A newspaper in Hong Kong has fired a political cartoonist, Wong Kei-Kwan, after four decades of publishing satire cartoons due to government officialsโ disapproval of comic content.
The Ming Pao, a Chinese-language newspaper, said it would stop publishing Wong Kei-Kwan cartoons.
โMing Pao thanks Zunzi for witnessing with us the changing times in the past 40 years,โ it said in a statement.
Mr Kei-Kwanโs published cartoons have been pulled out of the public domain.
The 68-year-old, who goes by the pen name Zing, has been running satirical cartoons in newspapers since 1983. He was accused of smearing the governmentโs image and misleading the public.
Mr Kei-Kwan said he would continue to speak out despite the situation.
โThe situation continues to develop in a bad direction,โ he told Reuters.
โThere are still many journalists who continue to speak out on different platforms, and comics are only one form. I will continue to speak out when I have the opportunity.โ
The move is widely seen as another step to control the media and press freedom in Hong Kong under a controversial national security law.