Media Ban on China's Charter Activists
HONG KONG-China's powerful Central Propaganda Department has ordered a crackdown on
Chinese media workers who signed a document which called this month for sweeping political
reforms, a management executive at a state-run media organization said, Radio Free Asia
(RFA) reports.
The message was given orally by the department, which is charged by the ruling Communist
Party with ensuring that China's media toe the Party line, the executive said. It was
aimed at anyone who had signed Charter 08, a document published online in early December,
sparking a flurry of interrogations, police searches, and detentions.
"It wasn't as if there was a written order issued by the Central Propaganda
Department. Nowadays the Central Propaganda Department rarely issues written orders.
Instructions are conveyed orally," the executive told RFA's Mandarin service.
He said media outlets had been barred from interviewing anyone who signed the charter and
from carrying articles penned by signatories. Some journalists had received visits or
phone calls warning them "not to go to extremes," he added.
Charter 08, signed by more than 300 prominent scholars, writers, and rights activists
around the country, called for concerned Chinese citizens to rally to bring about change,
citing an increasing loss of control by the ruling Communist Party and heightened
hostility between the authorities and ordinary people.
It called for a genuine use of the Constitution and institutions that uphold the rule of
law, democratic reforms, and human rights, warning of disaster amid growing social
tensions if change is not implemented soon.
Several of the Charter's signatories were detained, their homes searched, or they were
questioned and placed under surveillance even before the document had been published
online.
One journalist at a state-run media organization who signed Charter 08 also said he had
received a phone call from his boss, telling him not to bother submitting any more
articles.
He said the reason given was his involvement with the Charter.
Beijing-based rights activist Zhou Guoqiang, himself a signatory, said the authorities
want to force Chinese journalists to show where their loyalties lie.
"The policy is meant to intimidate those who have not yet signed the Charter,"
Zhou said. "It's like saying, you make the choice: either sign or carry on
writing."
Along with professional journalists and editors, the decision will likely affect scholars
and academics who contribute to the media.
Xu Youyu, a researcher with the Institute of Philosophy at the Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences, said he had signed the Charter.
"Recently a magazine asked me to write articles for a column," Xu said.
"When I asked for approval from my superiors I was told that I couldn't do
it."
"But I can't say for certain if it was because I had signed the Charter," Xu
added.
Slap at government
The Charter hit out at China's government for "clinging" to an authoritarian
political way of life.
"It has caused an unbroken chain of human rights disasters and social crises, held
back the development of the Chinese people, and hindered the progress of human
civilization," it said.
A former reporter with state-run China Central Television (CCTV) surnamed Li said the
government was trying to strong-arm the media. "Not allowing them to publish articles
after they signed the Charter, such is the behavior of thugs," Li said.
"The ideas advocated in Charter 08 are the kind of things that a government should
endeavor to achieve."
Meanwhile, Zan Aizong, former reporter with China Ocean News, said he doubted Beijing
would be able to exert total control.
"More than 300 people signed the Charter initially. And so many more people have
subsequently expressed support for it. Numerous articles have been written about it.
It's impossible for them to have total control," Zan said.
Many writers and academics were among the Charter signatories detained and questioned
earlier this month. They included constitutional scholar Zhang Zuhua and Beijing-based
independent writer Liu Xiaobo.
Deputy chairman of the writers' group Independent Chinese PEN Jiang Qisheng was
interrogated by police for two hours after he signed Charter 08, and Hangzhou-based
scholar Wen Kejian was also questioned. The Beijing home of writer Yu Jie, in the United
States at the time, was also surrounded by police around the time that the Charter was
published.
Original reporting in Mandarin by Qiao Long. Mandarin service director: Jennifer Chou.
Written for the Web in English by Luisetta Mudie. Edited by Sarah Jackson-Han.
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