Friday, January 11, 2013

Chinese reporters say censorship leaves them 'dancing in handcuffs'

Though Chinese?journalists are back to work at a prominent weekly after major protests, the paper has become a focal point for debate about Communist Party censorship.

By Peter Ford,?Staff Writer / January 11, 2013

A man buys a latest edition of the Southern Weekly at a newspaper stand near the Southern Weekly headquarters in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, China, Thursday. The staff of Southern Weekly returned to work after some controls were relaxed, but public demands for the ouster of the top censor were ignored.

Vincent Yu/AP

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As the proverbial smoke clears from the battlefield where journalists from the feisty Southern Weekend newspaper fought government censors this week, the reporters? victory seems to have yielded only meager gains.?

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Staffers at the weekly, based in the southern city of Guangzhou, won a pledge that their paper will no longer be subjected to prior censorship, according to sources close to negotiations. Instead, the authorities will rely on reporters and editors to censor themselves, as they had traditionally done.

?This was not an ambitious aim,? says Yan Lieshan, Southern Weekend?s associate chief editor until he retired a year ago. ?It was the most limited, most practical goal.?

Still, the journalistic rebellion, which involved strike threats, ?represents progress, because the staff did stand up and fight against censorship,? says Mr. Yan in a telephone interview.

?I don?t think censorship will disappear or become less important in [the government?s] management of the media,? adds Gong Wenxiang, professor of Journalism at Peking University. ?But the openness of this conflict was new and significant.?

Staff at Southern Weekend, an independent-minded weekly that in the past has been more critical of the government than most Chinese media, erupted? when they found that a New Year?s editorial?in last week?s edition, hoping for firmer rule of law in China, had been mangled on the censor?s orders, and its meaning traduced. Some threatened to strike.

The dispute spread rapidly, even as the authorities sought to keep a lid on it. Supporters of the paper gathered to demonstrate outside its Guangzhou editorial offices, celebrities and other newspapers expressed their sympathy with the weekly, and the state-run tabloid Global Times drew widespread scorn on blogging platforms for an editorial blaming ?foreign forces? for stirring unrest at Southern Weekend.

The Central Propaganda Department, the branch of the ruling Communist Party that controls the Chinese media, demanded that the country?s largest and most important newspapers and websites reprint the Global Times editorial. Most did, though they added their own disclaimers; one Beijing paper refused to print the article, but its editors finally bowed to government pressure a day later.?

Unusual debate?

Highly unusual debate over the merits of Southern Weekend?s case continued even in Communist Party-owned media; China Youth Daily ? official organ of the party?s youth wing ? showed sympathy for the weekly, arguing in a front page article yesterday that ?the news media are not evil troublemakers? and urging officials to behave less arrogantly.

Southern Weekend journalists made it clear, in blog posts and occasional public comments, that they were not seeking an end to press censorship, which has been a pillar of Communist Party rule for more than 60 years.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/X76F8sLgffw/Chinese-reporters-say-censorship-leaves-them-dancing-in-handcuffs

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