Hong
Kong
The sleaze behind the sleaze
Is there more to Edison Chen’s troubles than theft
by a computer technician? Asia sentinel.
Feb 18, 2008
Don’t
expect Hong Kong’s overheated media to give a full
account of the so-called Internet sex
photos scandal, despite the fact that local newspapers have
been repairing their balance sheets
with it for weeks and giving the public a liberal daily
lacing of all the titillation fit to print.
The
real scandal is not the perfectly normal, if somewhat energetic,
sexual activities of
singer Edison Chen and his various singer/actress girlfriends.
There
could even be more to come, but who in Hong Kong truly believes
that “innocent
looking” girls in their early 20s in the entertainment
business (or anywhere outside a convent) are
virgins? If they were it would be a man-bites-dog story.
The
real scandal likely cannot be told because it lies buried
in the obscure but crucial relationships
between Hong Kong’s entertainment industry, organised
crime, the government and police.
This
was the very police force that started arresting a few Internet
users who had passed on the
sexy pix to their friends despite the fact that the photos
had not been ruled obscene.
Subsequently
the relevant Hong Kong panel ruled the pictures indecent
rather than obscene.
Anyway,
by then the photos had been on-passed to Web sites around
the world – not just
Chinese language ones - and kicked off a stunning brouhaha.
Major
Chinese newspapers increased their press runs by 30 percent
to handle street sales from
the story. It is likely that at least a million people in
Hong Kong alone have seen some of the
raunchier ones in full anatomical detail.
Millions
more have seen the printed version, genitalia obscured,
which have been published in
feverish local magazines and newspapers.
In an
Internet world rife with pornography and nudity, the Hong
Kong officials’ decision to raid
the computer shop that repaired (and apparently looted)
Chen’s laptop was unusual.
Nine
people were arrested, with Hong Kong’s Commissioner
of Police, Tang King-shing,
warning sternly that mere possession of the photos would
violate the territory’s Colonial-era
obscenity law. One man was detained for days without bail
but was eventually released.
The
police and the government in general may have rushed to
make this an important issue
because one of the indirect victims was Albert Yeung, head
of the Emperor Entertainment
Group, whose family hails from the tough Chiu Chow region
of southern China.
The
female Cantopop stars’ sex exploits exposed by Edison
Chen’s photos were all members
of Yeung’s stable of entertainers. One of them, Vincy
Yeung, was his niece, a daughter of his
brother.
According
to official reports, the photos became public because they
were downloaded
by a computer technician who had been given Chen’s
pink Apple laptop computer to repair.
The
technician then gradually released them to the Internet.
However, though this story may
hold water in some respects, it looks unlikely to be the
whole truth.
It certainly
does not fully explain why the photos surfaced when they
did, or why new photos
continue to make their appearance.
This
suggests that someone other than the technician has control
of the smut cache, which
according to some reports is said to run to hundred of stills
and video clips and to involve 10
or so girls.
Yeung
himself is a well-known business figure long said –
and of course denied – to have or have
had connections to the Sun Yee On triad, a criminal organization
of long repute with activities in
Hong Kong, China and beyond.
He has
had several brushes with the law. In 1981 he was jailed
for attempting to pervert
the course of justice and in 1995 was cleared of criminal
intimidation and false imprisonment
after all five prosecution witnesses suffered sudden memory
lapses when called to testify.
Triad
activity has long been known to be rife in the film and
entertainment business in Hong
Kong and the Cantopop industry is among its most profitable
aspects.
Although
Yeung has many other business interests, ranging from a
casino in Pyongyang
to hotels and jewelry stores in Hong Kong, he is best known
for his role in the entertainment
industry and even into his 60s is noted in the gossip columns
for his attraction to budding female performers.
The
media frenzy over the sex photos may even help others in
the industry, particularly the
magazines and newspapers, which have seen their circulations
soar.
However
the careers of Emperor’s leading starlets are likely
to suffer dramatically, unless they
shift to the porn industry.
Unlike
in the west, where filmed Internet sex has caused barely
a hiccup in the careers of Pamela
Anderson, Britney Speers, Paris Hilton and others, in Hong
Kong this kind of thing is not takenlightly.
Edison
Chen himself is said to be prudently staying in North America
because relatives of the
singer’s many actress-girlfriends may have powerful
relatives who wish to do him harm when he
returns.
It also
just happens that the photo frenzy coincided with the stock
market listing of another part
of Yeung’s empire, New Media Group Holdings, which
publishes five weekly titles. Despite the generally depressed
market, New Media was 48 times oversubscribed and doubled
in price
when trading began.
Yeung’s
lesser known rival in the media business is the China Star
group run by Charles Heung
Wah-keung, also of Chiu Chow origin.
Heung
is a son of the reputed founder of Sun Yee On and was himself
identified as an office
bearer of the triad in a report on organized crime to the
US Senate.
Internet
blogs such as asianfanatics.net are full of all kinds of
theories relating to the photos, with suggestions of extortion
and other criminal activities more serious than pornography,
theft of
data or invasion of privacy.
They
draw heavily on the background and past records of various
players.
Also
noteworthy could be Albert Yeung’s strong links to
Chinese Communist Party figures who
have the ear of the Hong Kong government which, for whatever
reasons, prefers to ignore his
brushes with the law and regard him as a useful and patriotic
businessman.
http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1050&Itemid=34