Chinese Censorship Is Spreading All Over The World
Nov 6, 2013, 02:24 IST
REUTERS/Will Burgess The Chinese government has moved from censoring Chinese media to attempting to control media organizations outside the communist nation.
A new study by the Center for International Media Assistance has found that, over the last five years, China's media restrictions have begun to seriously affect the reportage and operations of international organizations.
As China's international political and economic power has grown, so has international coverage. The number of foreign correspondents in the country has nearly doubled since 2002. As a result, the Chinese government has moved to use its increased clout to control international opinion and reportage.
"The Communist Party thinks it's now powerful enough to intimidate [non-Chinese], from business people to diplomats to academics and journalists, and it's willing to throw its weight around," veteran China reporter Paul Mooney said. "It has learned that this often works and is willing to do anything to protect its image and stop negative news from being reported."
The Communist Party of China engages in four main strategies for influencing international media, according to the study:
- Direct action by Chinese diplomats, local officials, security forces, and regulators both inside and outside China. These measures obstruct newsgathering, prevent the publication of undesirable content, and punish overseas media outlets that fail to heed restrictions.
- Economic "carrots" and "sticks" to induce self-censorship among media owners and their outlets headquartered outside mainland China.
- Indirect pressure applied via proxies-including advertisers, satellite firms, and foreign governments-who take action to prevent or punish the publication of content critical of Beijing.
- Incidents such as cyberattacks and physical assaults that are not conclusively traceable to the central Chinese authorities but serve the party's aims and result from an atmosphere of impunity for those attacking independent media.