IFJ: Press Freedom in China Campaign Bulletin
In this bulletin:
1. Accreditation System Shuts Out
Citizen Journalists
2. Internet Clampdown on
Pro-Democracy Content
3. Dissident Writer Sentenced to
Jail
4. Heavy Surveillance on Charter 08 Activists
Continues
5. Police Detain Uyghur Website Editor
6.
Journalist Reports Violent Arrest by Police
7.
Journalist Refuses to Disclose Sources
8. Japanese
Advertisement Angers Netizens
9. Chinese Entries Invited
for International Competition
1) A new accreditation system for journalists was introduced by the General Administration of Press and Publication (GAPP) on October 15. The system provides administrative powers to control citizen journalism by preventing some journalists from gaining press cards. GAPP representatives said a black list system will be established to identify all journalists who it alleges are at risk of violating the law. Anyone on the list will not have their press cards validated. Under the system, an accredited journalist is defined as a media professional working in the editorial department of a media outlet. It excludes anyone who conducts journalistic work outside such media outlets as well as those who work for non-mainstream media outlets and information services. Local reports say this new definition is intended to restrict and control citizen journalism in China, whereby many human rights-related websites are providing news services to circumvent online censorship.
2) Authorities in
China have stepped up online censorship measures, informally
known as the Great Fire Wall of China, in response to a
memorial website on Twitter at http://http://www.berlintwitterwall.com.
The Berlin Twitter Wall invites people to post reflections
and commentary about the 20th anniversary of the fall of the
Berlin Wall in Germany on November 9. The Berlin Twitter
Wall project, an initiative of Reporters Without Borders,
was reportedly blocked in China just days after its launch
on October 20. Similarly, a website called Free China Forum
(http://http://www.zyzg.us), which is
dedicated to discussion on political reform, was also
blocked without explanation. Online discussion boards, blogs
and reporting on issues of freedom and democracy have also
been targeted. Nan Feng Chuang Magazine was reportedly
ordered to delete an article titled “China must implement
democracy” from the magazine from its website on October
21. A blogger who reported on the fatal bashing of a
Shandong woman on October 3 reported his blog was shut down
by his internet service provider. The article reported that
the woman, who had travelled to Beijing to lodge a complaint
against authorities, was in the custody of Shangdong police
when she died. A group of 15 people including writers and
lawyers published a proposed Internet Rights Declaration on
October 8 calling on China’s Government to encourage,
guarantee and respect the public’s right of access to the
internet. No response from the Government has been
reported.
3) Guo Quan, a former academic of Nanjing
University , was sentenced to 10 years’ imprisonment on
October 16 on charges of “subversion of state power”.
According to Li Jing, Guo’s wife, the sentence was handed
down without notice to her or Guo’s lawyer. Li confirmed
the sentence after contacting China’s Security Bureau on
October 17. Guo’s lawyer was also reportedly threatened by
police not to appeal or speak with foreign media. Guo’s
communications devices including QQ, MSN, and Skype had
reportedly been bugged by security officers, the judgement
said. In 2007, Guo - as founding Chairman of the China New
Democracy Party - wrote open letters to President Hu Jintao
and Premier Wen Jiabao calling for pluralistic political
reform. He was arrested on May 12, 2008 in Sichuan province
for writing critical articles about the quality of school
buildings destroyed in the Sichuan earthquake. Verdicts are
pending for writer Tan Zuoren and website founder Huang Qi,
who were also prosecuted for investigating the collapse of
schools and helping victims after the earthquake. The
families of both detainees have been denied access to them
for almost three months.
4) Key signatories of the
Charter 08 pro-democracy political reform petition, sent to
China’s authorities to mark the 60th anniversary of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights on December 10, 2008,
told the IFJ that authorities have not reduced the heavy
surveillance which preceded China’s National Day on
October 1. Zhang Zuhua and Jiang Qisheng, two Charter 08
leaders, are still unable to move or communicate freely.
Authorities allege the increased surveillance was necessary
for a visit by US President Barack Obama scheduled for
mid-November. However, Jiang reported that all his
communication devices are hacked, tapped or traced on a
daily basis. Luo Yongquan, another Charter 08 signatory who
was imprisoned in May for two years for writing
anti-government poetry and for signing the petition, is
reportedly not receiving adequate food and is forced to work
in bare feet, human rights groups said. Immigration
authorities also reportedly refused to allow the secretary
of the Writers in Prison Committee and Charter 08 signatory
Li Jianhong entry into China on October 15 and 16. Li is now
living in Sweden and unable to enter China despite being a
Chinese citizen.
5) A former editor of Uyghur Online
http://http://www.uighurbiz.net told the IFJ he was detained
by police in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region on October 1.
His family received a formal notice from the police a few
days later. Due to the clampdown on Uyghur-language websites
and all modes of communication with people living in the
region, no updates about the editor’s welfare are
currently available. According to a report by Radio Free
Asia, he was detained for allegedly endangering social
stability during the riots between Uyghur and Han ethnic
groups in the Xinjiang capital of Urumqi in early July. He
reportedly criticised local government, wrote and published
articles about violent attacks by police on protesters, and
accepted interviews with foreign media.
6) Zhang
Jinxing, a journalist for Cheng Du Shang Bao newspaper, was
reportedly assaulted and detained for eight hours by police
from Laocheng District, Luoyang in,Henan Province, while
reporting on a traffic accident on October 20. Zhang said he
was surrounded by police who then kicked and punched him
until he lost consciousness. When he regained consciousness,
he was handcuffed to a chair inside a police station and was
refused access to a telephone and the toilet. Police
reportedly twisted his wrists backwards when Zhang demanded
an explanation for his arrest. His camera and mobile phone
were taken from him. The Laocheng police claim that they
removed Zhang from the accident site for allegedly arguing
with the accident victim and for resisting police
intervention. An investigation by the prosecution department
and the police disciplinary committee is under way.
7)
Chiangjiang Times journalist Yao Haiying, from Jiang’an
City, Wuhan Province, told the IFJ he was forced by police
on September 16 to provide information about sources for an
investigative story. In a letter posted online at http://club.cat898.com/newbbs/dispbbs.asp?boardid=
1&id=3061857, Yao said he had received several phone
calls and messages from a Jiang’an City judiciary
department officer after publishing a report on September 4
alleging malpractice in the department. After repeated calls
and harassment, the Chiangjiang editor-in-chief sent a
formal letter to the officer on September 27 refusing to
reveal sources. However, Yao said the officer dismissed the
letter and continued to harass him. On October 16, the head
of the Jiang’an City judiciary prosecution section, Zhang
Zhenguo, said Yao had misunderstood the officer’s request
for information as a notice for interrogation.
8) The
Beijing Provincial propaganda department issued an order for
all media to delete images of President Hu Jintao in front
of a billboard advertising the Japan-based company Toshiba
during China’s National Day Parade on October 1. According
to Kyodo News Agency, a Beijing-based Japanese media outlet,
the order was made in response to heated online debates
among netizens and nationalists criticising China’s
Government for allowing a picture of the President to be
used with a Japanese advertisement.
9) Dutch international public broadcaster Radio Netherlands Worldwide has launched a competition to promote more interaction with its audience internationally. The competition is being run in Chinese, as well as Arabic, Dutch, English, French, Indonesian, Portuguese and Spanish. Participants are invited to send in stories in the form of videos, photos or short stories by December 4. The jury includes Chinese blogger Shugang Zhou among several senior journalists and editors worldwide First prize is a one-week trip to the Netherlands with a unique work placement in a Radio Netherlands editorial department. For more information, see http://http://www.enw.nl/contest.
ENDS