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Contact: Rohit Mahajan | mahajanr(a)rfa.org
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: May 2, 2023
RFA digital brand 歪脑 | WHYNOT a first-place winner at Human Rights Press
Awards
WASHINGTON - Radio Free Asia <https://www.rfa.org/english>’s (RFA) online
brand 歪脑 | WHYNOT was today named a first-place winner at this year’s Human
Rights Press Awards <https://humanrightspressawards.org/> for its
mini-documentary, Surviving Online Abuse
<https://www.wainao.me/wainao-watches/online-abuse-documentary-en>. The
project, which follows four survivors of online abuse who reflect on their
psychological trauma, won in the Documentary Chinese category of the Human
Rights Watch and Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass
Communications-sponsored competition, which was previously based in Hong
Kong.
“On the eve of World Press Freedom Day, it is fitting that RFA’s digital
brand 歪脑 | WHYNOT was named a winner at this year’s Human Rights Press
Awards,” RFA Executive Editor Min Mitchell said. “Their eye-opening
documentary on cyberbullying on the Chinese internet reveals underreported
truths about Chinese repression and speaks to the exact principles RFA -
and World Press Freedom Day - stand for. We couldn’t be prouder of their
incredible work.”
歪脑 | WHYNOT’s winning documentary is part of a broader project The Chinese
Internet’s Hidden Victims: Uncovering and Healing the Scars of Online Abuse
<https://www.wainao.me/wainao-reads/uncovering-and-healing-the-scars-of-online-abuse-04132022>,
which investigates the Chinese cyber space, and the abuse many social media
users experience. Despite filters and controls, research showed how
cyberbullying persists and is encouraged by authorities on state-controlled
platforms like WeChat, Douyin, and Weibo. For this investigation, 歪脑 |
WHYNOT conducted an online survey in February 2022, collecting and
examining data from over 2000 respondents from 220 cities in mainland
China. Through interviews with witnesses, survivors, former abusers,
scholars and researchers, 歪脑 | WHYNOT’s findings revealed damning
statistics about the extent of online abuse and the psychological trauma
victims experience.
Formerly sponsored by the Foreign Correspondents Club of Hong Kong, the
Human Rights Press Awards resumed this year for the first time since 2020,
after being suspended amid a severe crackdown on independent media in Hong
Kong. The awards recognize outstanding reporting on human rights issues in
Asia, with the goal of increasing respect for people’s basic rights and
raising awareness of the threats imposed on those freedoms.
# # #
Radio Free Asia is a private, nonprofit corporation broadcasting and
publishing online news, information, and commentary in nine East Asian
languages to listeners who do not have access to full and free news media.
RFA’s broadcasts seek to promote the rights of freedom of opinion and
expression, including the freedom to “seek, receive, and impart information
and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.” RFA is funded by
an annual grant from the United States Agency for Global Media.