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Chinese Government Views Natural Disasters as Threat to Power
Dong
Fang / VOA | July 7 2006
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The media in
China reported that the National People's Congress is considering legislation
that will severely punish media in China that report natural disasters
without authorization from higher levels.
Experts on China's current affairs noted that it
is unprecedented for the Standing Committee of National People's Congress
to implement news censor through legislation, since it is usually the
State Council Information Office that implements news control.
Unauthorized Reporting Deemed 'Stealing and Disclosing
National Secrets'
According to a report by the Beijing News , for five consecutive days
during the 22nd session of the Tenth National People's Congress, the Standing
Committee of the National People's Congress reviewed a draft on "Proposal
for Law on Responding to Emergency Events." The draft implements
strict limitations on how the media can report industrial accidents, natural
disasters, public health issues, social security issues and other unexpected
events. The draft stipulates that if the media in China "release
information related to handling emergency events as well as the status
of the event development" or "report false situations,"
they will be fined between 50,000 and 100, 000 yuan (USD 6,250- 12,500)."
Any media that reports events related to the emergency incidents without
authorization will be charged with "stealing and disclosing national
secrets" and sentenced to prison.
Cheng: The CCP Only Cares for Its Own Interests, Not Those of the Public
Cheng Xiaonong, advisor to China's former premier Zhao Ziyang, and currently
the Editor-in-Chief of Contemporary China Studies at Princeton University,
points out that the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress
implementing news censor shows that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)
only cares for its own interests, not those of the public, and that the
CCP no longer even desires the façade of caring for the public's
interest.
Cheng believes that allowing the Standing Committee to draft legislation
for news censorship damages the credibility of the legislative function
in China. He said, "This in fact is intentionally smearing the legislative
function of the Standing Committee and ruining the last sanctimonious
sign in China, which shows that legislative agencies still represent the
nation's interests. Letting the Standing Committee of the National People's
Congress handle this matter means the Standing Committee has fallen into
the party's grasp."
Cheng continued to say, "Making emergency news—such
as SARS—public is obviously to inform the people, as it concerns
everyone's health and safety. Announcing such news is the responsibility
of all countries and governments."
Cheng Xiaonong: The Chinese Government Fears Natural Disasters
Prior to the 1989 June Fourth Democracy Movement, Dr. Cheng Xiaonong worked
for the Research Office of the Standing Committee of the National People's
Congress General Office and Research Institute of Economic Restructuring;
he was also a head and vice researcher of the Multi-purpose Research Office
for Economic Restructuring. In an interview, Cheng said that CCP has always
used the mass media as their mouthpiece, but its fear about natural disasters
and accidents becoming public reveals how weak the Chinese government
is right now.
Cheng said, "It is not surprising that the Chinese
government has been controlling the media. The passing of this regulation,
however, explains an issue: now the Chinese government is so frail that
it cannot withstand even the slightest sign of disturbance. The Chinese
government is not really concerned about catastrophic accidents as threats
to its power—how much of a threat could a dozen people dying in
a coal mine explosion accident be to it?"
Chinese media reports that riots, natural disasters,
SARS, bird flu are a few events the Standing Committee's draft considers
as "emergency events" and "social security events."
The government has also followed the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's
Color-coded Threat Level System to color code those emergency events in
China into the following levels: Red (Level 1, severe); Orange (Level
2, significant); Yellow (Level 3, bad) and Blue (Level 4, normal).
Reporters Without Borders: Chinese Government is
Driving in Reverse Gear
Vincent Brossel, head of the Reporters Without Borders Group's Asia-Pacific
Desk, thinks this policy made by the Chinese government does not protect
people's interests. Instead, the Chinese government is not encouraging
Chinese media to be transparent regarding those important issues connected
to people's interests, but forcing the Chinese media to do a lot of self-check.
Brossel noticed that Chinese media freedom regarding
people's health and security accidents improved after the SARS incident
in 2003. He expresses regret over the matter that the Chinese government
is taking a step backwards this time.
Many Accidents Have Been Covered
Reuters reports that China has a very long history of covering up accidents.
Under the influence of Chinese news theory to report only good news and
conceal unpleasant news, the media is always concealing those bad-mouth
rivals that may impair the image of the party in power. 85,000 persons
died in the 1975 dam collapse in Henan Province, but the incident was
never mentioned until 1988, when it was cited in a book discussing the
most catastrophic disasters in the twentieth century in China.
Last November, news regarding the explosion of a
chemical factory in Jilin Province, which led to pollution of the Songhua
River, was concealed for days by government authorities. Water systems
for nine million people living in Haerbin City, an important Northeast
city located by the lower reaches of Songhua River, were forced to close
for one week.
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INFOWARS: BECAUSE THERE'S
A WAR ON FOR YOUR MIND
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