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    Greater China
     Oct 17, 2009
China's media blitz needs fact-checking
By Kent Ewing

HONG KONG - As news organizations across the world have slashed budgets and laid off journalists during the global economic downturn, China is enjoying a media boom.

Stung by critical international news coverage, Chinese leaders have allocated 45 billion yuan (US$6.6 billion) for the expansion of state media groups such as the Xinhua News Agency, China Central Television (CCTV) and China Radio International (CRI). The aim is to improve China's image abroad, which has taken repeated hits over Beijing's human rights record and riots in the regions of Xinjiang and Tibet.

CCTV recently added an Arabic-language channel that reaches 300 million people in 22 countries; soon the broadcaster will also

  

begin a Russian-language service. CRI can be heard in 43 different languages, and Xinhua is busy adding 117 bureaus around the world reporting in eight different languages. In addition, last April, amid dire predictions of the death of the newspaper in the Western world, Beijing launched an English-language version of the Global Times, a paper noted for its enthusiastic nationalism.

Underscoring this new media drive, this month the first World Media Summit - dubbed the "Media Olympics" - was held in the Great Hall of the People in Tiananmen Square in Beijing, with President Hu Jintao delivering the keynote address to such media luminaries as News Corp chief Rupert Murdoch, BBC global news director Richard Sambrook, Associated Press president Thomas Curley and Kyodo News boss Satoshi Ishikawa.

The idea for the two-day summit was born during talks between Xinhua president, Li Congjun, its host, and international media moguls who gathered in Beijing for the 2008 Summer Olympic Games. The stated aim of the conference, which drew 300 representatives from more than 170 media outlets in 80 countries, was to take up the technological challenges and opportunities of the digital age. But Beijing's larger, unspoken purpose was to soften up the world's leading news executives while stoking their dreams of a share of China's huge and still rapidly growing media market.

A country of 1.3 billion people, China already tops the world in Internet users with 338 million, more than the entire US population. Its mobile-phone market, with 710 million users, is also the world's largest.

News Corp's Murdoch is still waiting on Chinese authorities to allow Hong Kong-based Star TV, which he purchased in 1993 with an eye on the expanding mainland market, to compete throughout China. At present, Star's market access is severely restricted on the mainland.

Although his faith in Chinese authorities may have been misplaced, Murdoch's business sense was right. While many news organizations are struggling for survival in the West, business on the mainland is booming. In 1950, a year after the communist revolution established the People's Republic of China, the country had 65 radio and television stations and 253 newspapers with a daily circulation of 2.53 million; now there are 2,000 radio and television stations and nearly 2,000 papers with a circulation of 200 million. There is still much room for growth.

It was no surprise that Murdoch and his cohorts were models of reserve during their two-day conference in Beijing. When Hu promised to "safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of foreign news organizations and reporters and facilitate foreign media coverage of China in accordance with China's laws and regulations", none of the assembled media moguls raised questions about crippling restrictions on their coverage of trouble spots such as Xinjiang and Tibet. In last July's ethnic clashes in the Xinjiang capital of Urumqi, reporters were beaten and detained for doing their job.

And, no one dared mention the draconian limitations placed on the national media, which receives regular edicts from Beijing's propaganda czar about what they can and cannot report, or the central government's routine efforts to block the Internet as well as mobile-phone coverage.

Indeed, the whole idea of holding a "Media Olympics" in a country where the media are not free - and the spectacle of global media executives kowtowing to Chinese leaders in the Great Hall of the People - should be seen as an unsettling development for serious journalists everywhere. This is especially true when it comes at a time when Beijing is spending billions of dollars on a massive international media campaign.

How can the heads of the world's most prominent media organizations gather for two days of talks in the Chinese capital and ignore the elephant in the room - the central government's ongoing repression of the media? The topic of media freedom was conspicuous by its absence on the conference agenda and was also largely avoided in comments made on the sidelines by the bigwigs in attendance.

For example, this was AP president Curley's take on Hu's keynote, "I was delighted to hear, some 15 months after the Olympics, that the progress [in opening up to international media] will continue. Obviously, there are still some challenges and some issues, but his statement seemed quite sincere. That he joined us this morning was an important gesture as well."

Editor-in-chief of Reuters, David Schlesinger, was more blunt. "Companies and government departments and government officials need to be ready to be open," he said. "They need to take interviews and to reveal figures. Journalists working for foreign media are still too often excluded or granted a lower level of access."

But Schlesinger's criticism, mild as it was, was the exception to the general rule of deference to the host.

Still, Beijing was, by all accounts, a superb host. Accommodation at the Beijing Hotel and the Grand Hotel was first rate, and the Great Hall of the People provided a grand stage for the event, which Xinhua organized with notable style and professionalism.

From Beijing's point of view, the conference was a great success. In exchange for a few vague presidential promises about protecting the rights of foreign reporters, Chinese media officials, who dream of building their own state-controlled version of news and entertainment conglomerates like Time Warner and the Turner Broadcasting System, got to pick the brains of the world's most successful media executives.

There is no denying that Chinese leaders have made progress on media freedom; indeed, they were forced to make a raft of promises on this score to win their bid for the Olympic Games. It is also clear, however, that the country still has a long way to go, and the sincerity of those promises remains very much in doubt.

Kent Ewing is a Hong Kong-based teacher and writer. He can be reached at kewing@hkis.edu.hk.

(Copyright 2009 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)


Beijing hires a media guru
(Oct 10, '09)

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