- Beijing also declares 5 US media outlets to be
foreign government functionaries, calling them agencies controlled by
Washington
- ‘The US approach to the Chinese media is based on
a Cold War mentality and ideological bias,’ Foreign Ministry says
Published: 1:06am, 18 Mar,
2020
Reporters ask questions at a press conference, held by the State Council
Information Office, in Beijing on Tuesday. Photo: Xinhua
The Chinese Foreign Ministry
said on Tuesday that it was revoking the press credentials for American
journalists from three newspapers, The New York Times, The Wall Street
Journal and The Washington Post, requiring them to return
their media passes within 10 days and essentially expelling them from the
country.
Beijing also declared five
US media outlets – Voice of America, The Times, The Journal, The Post and Time magazine
– to be foreign government functionaries, identifying them as agencies
controlled by Washington.
The move is a fierce
retaliation against the Trump administration's labelling on five Chinese state
media as “foreign missions” last month. It also requires staff from the
five US news organisations to report their personal, financial and property
information to Chinese authorities.
The American journalists
must return their press cards to Foreign Ministry within 10 days, and they will
then be barred from working as journalists in China, including Hong Kong and
Macau.
Wall Street Journal reporters Philip Wen (left) and Josh Chin walk
through Beijing Capital Airport after being kicked out of the country on
February 24. Photo: AFP
“These measures are entirely
necessary and reciprocal countermeasures that China is compelled to take in
response to the unreasonable oppression the Chinese media organisations
experience in the US. They are legitimate and justified self-defence in every sense,”
the Foreign Ministry statement said.
“What the US has done is
exclusively targeting Chinese media organisations. … The US approach to the
Chinese media is based on a Cold War mentality and ideological bias, which has
seriously tarnished the reputation and image of Chinese media organisations. …
The US has been massively ‘deporting’ Chinese journalists in a disguised way,”
it added.
Martin Baron, executive
editor of The Post, responded on Tuesday: “We unequivocally condemn
any action by China to expel US reporters.
“The Chinese government’s decision is
particularly regrettable because it comes in the midst of an unprecedented
global crisis, when clear and reliable information about the international
response to Covid-19 is essential. Severely limiting the flow of that
information, which China now seeks to do, only aggravates the situation.”
Expelled Wall Street Journal
reporters leave China after headline row
Jude Blanchette, who holds
the Freeman Chair in China Studies at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, said the move “shows that the US and China are firmly
locked in a tit-for-tat battle on the landscape of the media and the press. The
US-China relationship was already deteriorating significantly. China’s move
wouldn’t alter the course but will just accelerate it.”
He said China’s actions were
not an apples-to-apples retaliation because those taken by the US State
Department were about increasing the oversight over Chinese state media
operating in the United States, while the journalists who are being expelled by
China, except for Voice of America, are independent journalists.
“Everyone knows state media
workers from China, many of them have a dual role, these aren't comparable, but
by the Chinese government’s own logic, it is by framing this retaliation and
reciprocity in it, it’s a smart move on their part because it makes these look
like this is a one for one response while they are qualitatively and
quantitatively different,” Blanchette said.
US Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo said on Tuesday that he regretted China’s decision and that he hoped
Beijing would reconsider. He said the move would deprive the world and the
Chinese people of information in “incredibly challenging” times caused by the
coronavirus.
The New York Times headquarters in Manhattan. The newspaper has several
bureaus in mainland China as well as Hong Kong. Photo: AP
All three US media outlets
have reported politically sensitive stories in China, a long-term taboo with
the Chinese Communist Party. The New York Times and Wall
Street Journal have written about Xinjiang, where China has interned
up to 1 million Muslims in detention camps. Beijing says the camps are designed
to combat extremism.
Last year, The Times revealed
more than 400 pages of internal Chinese documents about how to crack down on
ethnic minorities in the Xinjiang region without “showing mercy”.
Chun Han Wong, one of the
expelled Wall Street Journal journalists, was co-author last
year of a report that a cousin of Chinese President Xi Jinping was under
investigation in Australia for ties to organised crime, money laundering and
alleged Chinese influence-peddling.
China’s retaliation came
amid the growing tension between Beijing and Washington over issues ranging
from trade, visas, intellectual property theft to even the coronavirus
pandemic.
The move not only deepens
the rift between Beijing and Washington – which has been growing since before
US President Donald Trump started a trade war with China nearly two years ago –
but also drags the issue of Hong Kong’s autonomy into the stand-off.
“China’s decision to kick
American journalists out of the PRC is evidence of the ongoing decoupling not
only of supply chains and financial systems, but of information and knowledge
systems – of media and academia,” said Robert Daly, director of the Wilson
Centre’s Kissinger Institute on China and the United States.
US blacklists 28 Chinese
entities over Xinjiang
“Forbidding foreign
journalists to report freely from Hong Kong clearly violates the spirit of
Beijing’s promise that the [special administrative region] could retain its
social system for 50 years after the handover,” he added.
Earlier this month, the US
State Department imposed employment restrictions on five Chinese state media
outlets – all are deemed as propaganda arms of the Chinese Communist Party –
requiring them to reduce the number of their US-based Chinese employees to
around 100 from 160 now.
Pompeo said the move was a
retaliation for Beijing’s “increasingly harsh surveillance, harassment and
intimidation” of American journalists.
Foreign Ministry spokesman
Zhao Lijian said the US action against five Chinese news outlets would harm
ties between the two countries and said China reserved the right to take
further action.
In February, the US
government declared several mainland Chinese media outlets – state news agency
Xinhua, China Global Television Network (CGTN), China Radio
International, China Daily and Hai Tian Development USA – to
be agencies controlled by Beijing.
The directive requires staff
from these organisations to register with the US State Department the same way
that embassy and consular employees do.
Hours after that US
declaration, Beijing expelled three Wall Street Journal reporters,
saying the move was prompted by the newspaper’s “sick man of Asia” headline on
an opinion article.
Additional reporting by
Robert Delaney
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