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・ Asian Weightlifting Championships
・ Asian Weightlifting Federation
・ Asian Pacific American
・ Asian Pacific American Bar Association Educational Fund
・ Asian Pacific American Heritage Festival
・ Asian Pacific American Heritage Month
・ Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance
・ Asian Pacific American Librarians Association
・ Asian Pacific American Medical Student Association
・ Asian Pacific Children's Convention
・ Asian Pacific Internet Exchange Association
・ Asian Pacific Islander Queer Women and Transgender Community
・ Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
・ Asian Pacific League for Freedom and Democracy
・ Asian Pacific Mathematics Olympiad
Asian Pacific Post
・ Asian Pacific Thematic Historic District
・ Asian Paints
・ Asian Paints Sharad Shamman
・ Asian palm civet
・ Asian palm swift
・ Asian Para Games
・ Asian paradise flycatcher
・ Asian Paralympic Committee
・ Asian Parliamentary Assembly
・ Asian particolored bat
・ Asian pear
・ Asian people
・ Asian Perspectives
・ Asian Peruvian


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Asian Pacific Post : ウィキペディア英語版
Asian Pacific Post
The Asian Pacific Post is a weekly Canadian newspaper founded in 1993 in Vancouver, British Columbia. The newspaper specialized in reporting Asian issues, and has a readership of 160,000.〔(About us )〕 It has a sister publication in ''The South Asian Post''.
The newspaper won a Jack Webster award for Excellence in Journalism for Best Community Reporting in 2003.〔(The 2003 Jack Webster Awards )〕
==Conflict with the Epoch Press==
According to the ''Asian Pacific Post'', Frank Cui of the Epoch Printing Press, which also prints The Epoch Times, attempted to stop the printing of the paper on January 8 in 2009. This was due to the printing of an article which stated that the Chinese government accused the ''Divine Performing Arts'' hosted by NTDTV of being funded by Falun Gong practitioners.〔Mata Press Service, ("Punjabi Publisher fights for press freedom in BC" ) South Asian Post, March 2009〕 Cui refused to print the newspaper without the removal of quotes from Chinese officials. Publisher Sewak accused Falun Gong of suppressing his freedom of speech, and the Asian Pacific Post was forced to switch publishers.
Epoch Press' president, Frank Cui, who is a Falun Gong practitioner, admitted to holding the paper.〔 He said "...news reporters feel that they must 'balance' stories about Falun Gong or events they are involved in by adding the bad words or opinions from the (Chinese Communist Party ), but in my feeling, between victim and perpetrator there can never be any neutrality or balance." Harbinder Singh Sewak, publisher of the Post, said "This is hypocrisy in slow motion... You can’t complain about not having freedom of the press in China and then turn around and suppress the same freedoms in Canada".〔 Sewak alleges the printer committed unlawful interference with economic interests, including breach of contract and deceit.〔Elaine O'Connor, (Paper sues former printer ), The Province, March 26, 2009〕 Lawyers representing Falun Dafa denied any association with the actions of Frank Cui.〔
This story has been covered by the ''South China Morning Post'',〔(Falun Gong staff close Canadian newspaper )〕 ''The Vancouver Sun'',〔(Newspaper accuses printer of censorship )〕 and ''The Province''.〔(Falun Gong quashes press )〕 Sewak has since taken the Epoch Printing Press to court over the matter〔Elaine O'Connor, (Paper sues former printer ), The Province, March 26, 2009〕 The lawyer representing the Asian Pacific Post states that the case is unique in Canada. "We have yet to find a case anywhere in Canada which would be similar to this - a commercial printer holding a newspaper hostage on the basis they don't like an article is a pretty strange set of facts.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Asian Pacific Post」の詳細全文を読む



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