Kristin
Jones has been doing a great job monitoring the Chinese media and the more
unofficial online world. One of the realities she has pointed out is the similarity
of coverage across
An interesting piece, "Screws
tighten on mainland journalists," ran in the South China Morning Post, Hong
Kong's largest English-language daily. SCMP staff in
The SCMP was risky--not so much for them, but for their sources. The Central Propaganda Department regularly hands down these sorts of directives to editors around the country. Chinese journalists who publicize them can face severe punishment. Shi Tao, is serving out a 10-year sentence for posting notes from a 2004 directive issued by China's Propaganda Department that instructed the media how to cover the 15th anniversary of the military crackdown in Tiananmen Square.
Jimmy Cheng Qinghua, an editor for state-run China Radio
International (CRI) in
The media story from Beijing has remained focused on how foreign journalists are being hassled in China; restricted Internet access, police abuse, surveillance of activities are all legitimate issues. But when the IOC gave the Games to Beijing in 2001--"There will be no restrictions on journalists in reporting on the Olympic Games," the Beijing Olympics organizers said in their official bid--there was no distinction made between foreign and Chinese journalists.
I've been urging international reporters to
cover China's media as a story on its own, and to talk with their Chinese
colleagues about how they are covering their country and the Games. They should
seek out their Chinese colleagues and compare notes while they are in

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