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Protests in Taipei as Jimmy Lai inks Next Media deal

Asian media mogul Jimmy Lai’s sale of his Taiwan holdings has sparked protests in Taipei as fears grow it will greatly expand Chinese influence on the democratic island.

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Demonstrators scuffle with police during a protest against the sale of influential media outlets to a pro-China businessman in Taipei on Tuesday. Photo: AP
Bien Perez

Publishing tycoon Jimmy Lai Chee-ying on Tuesday completed the sale of Next Media's print and television holdings in Taiwan, following the signing of a definite agreement with the buying consortium at an undisclosed hotel in Macau on Tuesday.

Next Media, in which Lai is chairman and controlling shareholder, sold those assets to a group of Taiwanese buyers for NT$17.5 billion (HK$4.7 billion) in cash.

The share price of Next Media, which publishes the Chinese-language Apple Daily in Hong Kong, rose 4.61 per cent to finish at HK$1.59, as investors anticipated that deal being closed.

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The deal involves the sale of the Taiwanese editions of Apple Daily and Next magazine, as well as Next TV to businessman Tsai Eng-meng, banking scion Jeffrey Koo Jr, and Formosa Plastics Group president Wang Wen-yuan.

The deal still requires approval by Taiwan regulators.

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About 100 protesters gathered outside the cabinet offices to protest the sale, focusing their attention on Tsai, who made a fortune selling rice crackers on the Chinese mainland, and whose China Times newspaper is a strong supporter of Chinese policies.

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