In a report titled China’s Pursuit of a New World Media Order, the Paris-based global watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has investigated Beijing’s strategy to control
information beyond its borders, a project that it says poses a threat to press freedom throughout the world.
China, ranked 176 out of 180 in the 2018 World Press Freedom Index compiled by Reporters Without Borders (RSF), is expanding its hold beyond its borders to impose its “ideologically
correct” vocabulary, to deter any criticism of itself and to cover up the darker chapters in its history.
Less well known than the Belt and Road Initiative, but just as ambitious, this project poses a threat to press freedom throughout the world, said RSF.
The China’s New World report.
This is what RSF reveals in its investigative report entitled China’s Pursuit of a New World Media Order, available in French, English and Chinese versions on its website rsf.org
The NGO highlights the strategy deployed by the Chinese state to achieve its goals. These strategies include:
modernising its international TV broadcasting, buying extensive amounts of advertising in international media,
infiltrating foreign media… but also employing blackmail, intimidation and harassment on a massive scale.
“In the spirit of the Beijing regime, journalists are not intended to be a counter-power but rather to serve the
propaganda of states,” said Christophe Deloire, secretary-general of RSF.
“If democracies do not resist, Beijing will impose its view and its propaganda, which is a threat for journalism and
democracy.”
Training ‘critical thinking’ in Beijing
Over the past decade, China has invested massively in developing media capable of reaching an international public. And
it has succeeded: state-owned CGTN broadcasts TV programmes in 140 countries and China Radio International broadcasts in
65 languages.
The regime has managed to convince tens of thousands of journalists in emerging countries – including from the Pacific –
to go on all-expense-paid trips to Beijing to “train their critical mind” in exchange for favorable press coverage.
As for the Chinese diaspora media, many of which used to be critical of the regime, almost all have been bought out and
disseminated into the propaganda apparatus of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
Violence and intimidation
Beijing is also exporting its censorship and surveillance tools, including the Baidu search engine and WeChat instant
messaging platform, and encouraging authoritarian states to copy its repressive regulations, a particularly effective
strategy in Southeast Asia.
Beijing calls for intimidation and violence to silence dissidents, even in democratic nations. From freelance reporters
to major media outlets, from publishing houses to social media platforms, no link in the news production chain is immune
to the “invisible hand” of Beijing.
Even Chinese ambassadors no longer hesitate to openly denigrate press articles that question the official narrative of
China, and often in rather undiplomatic ways.
Democracies are struggling to react in the face of these threats.
Pacific Media Watch works in partnership with Reporters Without Borders.