Hong Kong's pro-democracy Apple Daily newspaper will close by this weekend after police arrested five editors and executives and froze $3.27 million (US$2.3m) in assets linked to the paper.
The board of directors said in a statement today that its print edition and online edition will cease no later than Saturday due to "the current circumstances prevailing in Hong Kong".
The widely expected move followed last week's arrests. The five were detained on suspicion of colluding with foreigners to endanger national security. Police cited more than 30 articles published by the paper as evidence of an alleged conspiracy to impose foreign sanctions on Hong Kong and China.
It was the freezing of assets that spelled the paper's demise. The board of directors had earlier this week written to Hong Kong's security bureau requesting the release of some of its funds so that the company could pay wages.
The police operation against Apple Daily drew criticism from the US, the EU and Britain, which say Hong Kong and Chinese authorities are targeting the freedoms promised to the city when the former British colony was returned to China in 1997.