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Along the Yangtze River in Wuhan in central China's
Hubei province on Sunday. (Ng Han Guan/AP)
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China has placed enormous pressure on foreign journalists during
the novel coronavirus crisis. Bureaus have emptied as U.S. citizens have been forced out, while international travel restrictions have kept journalists
from reentering the country.
But if Beijing’s intention was to limit scrutiny of its coronavirus
response, it has only partially succeeded. Some of the most damning
reporting on the pandemic has come from Chinese organizations, which are
taking great risks in one of the world’s most restrictive media
environments.
“The truth is that the Chinese Communist Party leadership regards any
reporting of the facts as ultimately a threat to the stability of the
regime,” said David Bandurski, co-director of the China Media Project.
Last week, Caixin, a Beijing-based publication known for political
investigations, published a story that questioned the official
coronavirus death count in Wuhan, the Chinese epicenter of the outbreak.
“In virus-ravaged Wuhan, hours-long queues to collect the ashes of the
dead,” ran the headline of an English translation.
Officially, the death toll in Wuhan has stalled at a little over
2,500, a detail repeatedly highlighted by China’s Foreign Ministry. But
something didn’t add up, Caixin noted: One local crematorium in the city
was operating for 19 hours a day and in just two days, 5,000 urns were
delivered to the establishment.
Foreign media outlets, including The Washington Post and many others, picked up on the
details. Radio Free Asia, a publication funded by the U.S. government,
extrapolated further, suggesting that as many as 42,000 could have
died in the city.
For Caixin, it was just the latest in a string of critical coronavirus
stories, some of which included criticism of China’s slow reaction in the early days of
the outbreak, while others warned that asymptomatic cases appeared to still be spreading in Wuhan.
The work has brought Caixin further international attention: In recent
days, the publication has been highlighted by voices as diverse as Turkish academic Zeynep Tufekci
and Republican Sen. John Cornyn of Texas.
But in China, international praise can be a burden. This week on
Weibo, China’s version of Twitter, the cover of Caixin Weekly magazine
prompted angry responses from those who saw it as an attack on China. Users accused founder Hu Shuli of smearing the
country’s reputation.
Undertaking independent journalism in China has long required a
delicate balance. Chinese reporters aren’t reliant on visas like
foreigners, but they face other risks: At least 48 Chinese journalists
were jailed last year, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, the most of any
nation.
Meanwhile, to be a commercial success, private outlets must face two
conflicting factors: a state that wants to restrict access to the truth
and an audience that knows when they are lied to. “We walk on a
tightrope,” Liu Changle, the Chinese media tycoon behind the
quasi-independent Phoenix TV, told The Post in 2005.
Some independent news outlets were able to push the envelope when Hu
Jintao led the country from 2002 to 2012. Publications like Caijing, the
first magazine founded by Caixin’s Hu, and the Southern Metropolis Daily
published major investigations into the SARS virus outbreak and police
brutality, among other topics.
But they remained restricted by China’s Central Propaganda Department
and required a government-affiliated sponsor. The restrictions increased
after Xi Jinping took over in 2013, leading the country in an
aggressively nationalist direction.
Caixin, which Hu founded after leaving Caijing in 2013, has been able
to navigate China’s media landscape better than most. Some attribute this
to Hu’s savvy and personal connections — she comes from a line of
Communist Party intellectuals and maintains a friendship with Wang
Qishan, China’s vice president.
A 2009 New Yorker profile noted that Hu lived in an
elite compound favored by government media workers. Yaxue Cao, a
Washington-based activist, said Caixin couldn’t truly be considered
independent because of Hu’s connections. “Instead of independence, it’s a
privilege,” Cao said.
But even Caixin found some topics difficult to touch — it has not
covered the persecution of Uighurs in Xinjiang with the intensity of
foreign media outlets, for example. “They know better than anyone where
the lines are,” said Bill Bishop, author of the Sinocism newsletter.
The early weeks of China’s outbreak saw a remarkable push by
independent journalists. Yuan Zeng, a scholar at the University of
Leeds, pointed to a variety of outlets like China Youth Daily, YiMagazine
and Sanlian Lifeweek that published investigative reports that
scrutinized the official version of events.
Most of these reports were in Chinese and many were deleted by
censors, but some have been translated into English, such as China News Weekly’s Feb. 10 cover story: “How China
missed the critical window for controlling the coronavirus outbreak.” The
China Media Project has excerpted a series by People magazine that
interviewed front-line health-care workers.
Those who track Chinese journalism now think the state has clamped
down again. “At this point, most of the critical or investigative
reporting on this topic has been silenced,” said Maria Repnikova, a
Georgia State University professor, who predicted such a clampdown in early February.
On social media, where there had been a groundswell of outrage
following the death of whistleblower doctor Li Wenliang, critical voices
have dwindled as citizen journalists were arrested, said King-wa Fu of
the University of Hong Kong.
These shifts can leave independent outlets stuck in an awkward
position. The Chinese government seems to be allowing some journalism if
it aligns with Beijing’s domestic narrative about the outbreak that
blames local officials. But this narrative conflicts with the cruder
international message.
“The domestic narrative is all about: ‘Yes, mistakes were made at the
beginning by the bad, bad, incompetent local people,’” said Bishop. “And
globally, of course, it’s: ‘We did everything we could and we bought some
time and even now we’re trying to save the world.’ It’s a pretty huge
contradiction.”
Neither Hu nor Caixin editor Wang Shuo responded to requests to
discuss their coronavirus coverage; other Caixin journalists would not
speak on the record. Though Caixin has withstood many previous
crackdowns, its increasingly high profile puts it at risk. “Caixin is not
immune,” Zeng said.
Despite Caixin’s newfound popularity in American political circles,
the United States and China remain locked in a standoff that often
targets journalists. At a news conference on Monday, President Trump
grilled a reporter from Phoenix TV, which is privately owned but
pro-Beijing.
In February, right-wing pundits argued that Caixin’s D.C. correspondent should be
kicked out of the country after she asked a question at a news
conference.
It is remarkable that China’s independent journalists can operate
under such conditions, let alone still publish groundbreaking work. “What’s
frustrating is what they could do if they weren’t constrained,” Bishop
said. “You can see glimpses of the awesome potential.”
They know it, too. On a recent podcast discussing their work in Wuhan, Caixin
reporter Gao Yu suggested his team had uncovered up to 80 percent of what
happened — but they had only been able to publish 40 percent at most. |
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Talking Points
• A steady rise in
countries limiting or banning food exports has triggered warnings from
U.N. food agency leaders about possible disruptions to
the global food supply as the world retrenches amid the covid-19 pandemic
— potentially making critical
staples such as wheat and rice more costly
and harder to find. Reductions in exports could hit
countries in Africa, the Philippines, the Persian Gulf and other regions
that import much of their food.
• Saudi Arabia
announced a cease-fire in Yemen on Wednesday, a gesture officials said was aimed at
jump-starting a dialogue for peace and staving off
the threat of the coronavirus. The kingdom has been mired in Yemen’s war
for more than five years.
• An international
watchdog firmly linked Syria to deadly 2017 nerve-agent attacks,
bolstering the case that President Bashar al-Assad continued using lethal chemical
weapons after he ostensibly surrendered his stockpile
three years earlier. Syria and Russia have steadfastly denied any use of
chemical weapons, instead insisting that rebels or outsiders staged the
attacks.
• As the Chinese
city Wuhan’s lockdown ends, residents have left hundreds of thousands of
messages to the country's famous Wuhan hero: Li Wenliang,
the whistleblower doctor who died Feb. 7. In tones both casual and
intensely personal, they have used Li a as kind of a silent confidant,
therapist and muse, The Post’s Gerry Shih reports. |
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