MCLC: China reacts to Burma's media reform

Denton, Kirk denton.2 at osu.edu
Thu Aug 23 09:38:13 EDT 2012


MCLC LIST
From: Ying Zhu <yingzhu95014 at yahoo.com>
Subject: China reacts to Burma's media reform
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Source: The Irwaddy (8/22/12): http://www.irrawaddy.org/archives/12051

China Reacts to Burma’s Nascent Media Reform
By PATRICK BOEHLER / THE IRRAWADDY

The end to pre-publication censorship in Burma has generally been welcomed
by Chinese journalists, but has also led China’s leading right-wing daily
to publish an ambiguous editorial stating that Naypyidaw should not serve
as Beijing’s role model.

“China should follow the trend of the times and look at the practical
situation of the nation,” read an opinion piece in Tuesday’s the Global
Times. “Rather than being perplexed and even letting backwater countries
like Myanmar and Vietnam become our idols.”

“As for Myanmar, its burgeoning reforms are still very uncertain, and the
effectiveness of various reform measures remains to be verified,” the
editorial cautioned. “All of these are experimental, and boldness is
actually the most prominent characteristic of Myanmar’s reform.”

The paper’s editorials, while anonymous, are generally understood to be
written by its editor-in-chief Hu Xijin. “China has inspired its neighbors
through reform and opening, now their reforms can inspire and touch
China,” he wrote on his micro-blog on Tuesday.

“If Chinese media opened up, the Global Times would have to close shop,”
renowned Beijing-based contemporary Chinese history scholar Lei Yi quipped
while commenting on the editorial.

The government mouthpiece People’s Daily was more positive in its report
quoting an unnamed Burmese journalist as saying that Monday was a “great
day” for the domestic media. The article written by its Bangkok
correspondent Sun Guangyong noted that sensitive issues such as the ethnic
conflicts are still taboo.

“A wide range of interests—the government, the military, ethnic minorities
and the international community—will be affected by media freedom,” Yin
Hongwei, a Kunming-based journalist, told The Irrawaddy. In the new
environment, “China’s interests are bound to trigger new enmities.”

Yin, who has covered Burmese news from Yunnan Province for many years,
said he expected the Burmese media to enter “a period of turmoil” in which
the law should eventually delineate the limits of reporting.

Hu Shuli, the editor-in-chief of the business news weekly Caixin,
cautioned that the opening of Burmese media freedom is limited. “The Press
Scrutiny and Registration Division still continues to exist, and it
continues to hold the power to stop publications and revoke publication
permits,” Hu wrote on her microblog on Tuesday. She became an icon of
challenging censorship in China since founding the investigative business
magazine Caijing in 1998.

“The road towards a free press is by no means smooth,” an opinion piece on
the Caijing website read on Tuesday. “But, at least, Burma has taken a
first step.”

The Committee to Protect Journalists listed Burma as the seventh most
censored country in the world in May with China as runner-up, calling the
world’s second-largest economy “a model for censorship regimes elsewhere.”

On Tuesday, the Foreign Correspondents’ Clubs in Shanghai, Beijing and
Hong Kong issued a rare joint statement urging mainland Chinese
authorities to “ensure that journalists are protected from violence and
intimidation.”

The Chinese censorship system also shows the perils of more sophisticated
forms of restricting the freedom to report sensitive issues, said Ying
Zhu, the author of Two Billion Eyes: the Story of China Central Television.

“Besides the potential political consequences of ideologically sensitive
reporting,” she told The Irrawaddy, “Chinese journalists are also
vulnerable to libel suits, adding another measure of caution to
journalists’ self-censorship impulse.”

“I can certainly foresee the sort of intricate dance Burmese journalists
must perform as they test their boundaries of what is permissible by the
authorities,” said the US-based Chinese media expert.

“‘I am so used to stopping when I still have more to say,’” she recalls a
Chinese national television host telling her. “The kind of
boundary-testing self-censorship has become the norm among Chinese media
professionals as they try to balance the will of the party, the market and
their professional instincts,” added Ying.

Shi Yonggang, chief editor of Hong Kong-based Phoenix Weekly, said on his
microblog that Burma’s censors realized that a government’s role is to
promote the media rather than control it. “This neighbor of ours is moving
so fast and they are not waiting for us to catch up.”




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