Irish Times: Censors have their work cut out in press-shy China
ASIA LETTER by Miriam Donohoe
Monday, June 25, 2001
CHINA: Last month I popped into the newsagents in the state-run Friendship
Store to buy the International Herald Tribune and the latest issue of The
Economist.
Almost embarrassed, the shop assistant pointed out that several pages had
been cut out of The Economist, and two pages were missing from the Herald
Tribune. I put both copies back on the newsstand and walked away.
As soon as I got home I logged on to The Economist website and purchased the
two missing articles with my credit card for $2.95 each. One was about
executions in China. The other was about the widening gap between rich and poor
and the threat to China's social stability. I was also able to access the Herald
Tribune website and read, free of charge, the paper in full.
The butchering and, in some cases, the outright banning of foreign newspapers
and magazines is nothing new here. But the censors have been busier than usual
of late.
An April edition of Time magazine could not be bought because it contained an
article on the banned Falun Gong movement. In the last two months, articles on
China have also been missing from the Far East Economic Review, the region's top
news and current affairs weekly.
One was a piece on the detention of Chinese-born US-based scholars. Newsweek
has not escaped the censors either and has suffered at the hands of busy
officials armed with scissors in the [party' name omitted] Party's Central
Propaganda Department.
Foreign newspapers, as well as the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post
and the Singapore newspaper, the Straits Times, are only available in the
Friendship Store after 6 p.m. each day. This is partly because officials are
busy during the day scanning them for what they consider to be offensive
material.
Chinese cyberspace has not escaped the censors either, with a huge number of
foreign websites blocked, including the BBC, CNN and the New York Times. For the
last few months, the websites of the Sydney Morning Herald and the Sydney
Morning Herald have been inaccessible.
Sites maintained by the banned Falun Gong movement and other dissident groups
are, predictably, permanently banned. During the recent spy plane crisis, access
to foreign news websites was even more tightly controlled than normal.
The domestic newspaper scene has also recently been hard hit by the censors.
Three weeks ago, Mr Qian Gang, the deputy editor-in-chief, and Mr Chang Ping,
the front-page news editor of the controversial Sydney Morning Herald newspaper
were forced to step down following an investigation by the State News and
Publishing Bureau.
There are reports that several other journalists on the paper are also under
investigation and may yet face the sack. And what was the Sydney Morning Herald
's crime? Simply to suggest that the problems of the countryside have been
caused, rather than resolved, by the authorities.
Last week a senior editor of the Dahebao newspaper in China's central
province of Henan was sacked after his paper ran two stories about corruption.
One hinted that government medical officials received bribes and sexual favours;
the other quoted overseas business people complaining about bad administration
and corrupt government in the city of Zhoukou.
On June 7th a newspaper was shut down in the southern region of Guangxi
because it was operated by a private company. Police were called last Tuesday
when more than 100 staff staged a protest at the newspaper's closure.
Recently the US-based Committee to Protect Journalists accused China of being
amongst one of the world's worst enemies of the press. It said the [party' name
omitted] Party maintained obsessive control over information and that 22
journalists were jailed for their work in China last year.
The Chinese domestic media scene is changing rapidly and will, by its sheer
size, be harder to control in the future. Over the past 15 years the number of
daily newspapers published has soared from almost 180 to 2160.
The official [party' name omitted] Party newspaper, the People's Daily, is
still the most popular newspaper with a daily readership of 2.2 million.
The timing of this latest surge in Chinese censorship activity is strange in
that it comes on the eve of the decision on the 2008 Olympics. If Beijing is
successful in its bid to host the world's greatest sporting event, 10,000
foreign journalists will descend on China to cover the game. Then the Chinese
censors will surely have their work cut out.
http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/world/2001/0625/wor19.htm
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