China to Censor Journalists During Olympics

Reporters Without Borders
Your rating: None

OneWorld.net note: "The Chinese authorities confirmed today that the 20,000 foreign journalists covering the Olympic Games will not have unrestricted access to the Internet during their stay," said a press freedom advocacy group this Wednesday.

  • The Beijing Olympic Stadium.: The International Olympic Committee will allow China to censor journalists' internet options during the Olympic Games. © Theo W L Jones (flickr)The Beijing Olympic Stadium.: The International Olympic Committee will allow China to censor journalists' internet options during the Olympic Games. © Theo W L Jones (flickr)On Tuesday, human rights watchdog Amnesty International released a report on human rights in China and stated that, "The Chinese authorities have broken their promise to improve the country’s human rights situation and betrayed the core values of the Olympics." Foreign journalists in China are currently barred from accessing the report online.
  • Amnesty International has also launched a new Web site called The China Debate, an online forum to discuss human rights in China in the run-up to the Beijing Olympics. The site is available in English and Mandarin Chinese.
  • Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has listed Chinese President Hu Jintao as one of its "Predators of Press Freedom," specifying that, "the Chinese president has done nothing to prevent the arrests of scores of dissidents and bloggers, including Hu Jia, who called for greater freedom ahead of the Olympic Games."
  • Humanitarian activist Hu Jia is currently imprisoned for "inciting subversion of state authority." RSF is campaigning for his release. Other imprisoned Chinese cyber-dissidents include Huang Qi, arrested for criticizing the government's earthquake relief efforts, and Du Daobin, detained for posting articles calling for freedom of expression in China.

IOC accepts organized online censorship

Internet censorship is first winner at Beijing games

From: Reporters Without Borders

The Chinese authorities confirmed today that the 20,000 foreign journalists covering the Olympic Games will not have unrestricted access to the Internet during their stay. Kevin Gosper, the head of the IOC’s press commission, admitted today: “I also now understand that some IOC officials negotiated with the Chinese that some sensitive sites would be blocked on the basis they were not considered games related.”

Yesterday Gosper said the IOC’s key concern was to “ensure that the media are able to report on the games as they did in previous games.”

Reporters Without Borders condemns the International Olympic Committee’s acceptance of the fact the Chinese authorities are blocking access to certain websites at the Olympic Games media centre in Beijing. More than 20,000 foreign journalists are affected.

The organization also condemns the cynicism of the Chinese authorities, who have yet again lied, and the IOC’s inability to prevent this situation because of its refusal to speak out for several years.

“Yet another broken promise!” the press freedom organisation said. “Coming just nine days before the opening ceremony, this is yet another provocation by the Chinese authorities. This situation increases our concern that there will be many cases of censorship during the games. We condemn the IOC’s failure to do anything about this, and we are more than sceptical about its ability to ‘ensure’ that the media are able to report freely.”

Sun Weide, the chief spokesman for the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games (BOCOG), today said the authorities would only guarantee “sufficient” Internet access for accredited media.

The Internet that foreign journalists in China can access is only relatively free. Yesterday, they were unable to access a new Amnesty International report entitled “The Olympic countdown - broken promises” or the websites for many foreign media, such as the BBC’s Chinese-language service, the German public broadcaster Deutsche Welle, the Hong Kong-based Apple Daily and the Taiwan-based Liberty Time. The Reporters Without Borders and Falungong spiritual movement websites were also inaccessible.

Last February, the IOC announced that athletes would be allowed to keep blogs during the games as they were “a legitimate form of personal expression and not a form of journalism” but it said the blogs would have to free of political content.

Here is Reporters Without Borders’ advice to foreign journalists facing Internet censorship.

For more coverage of the Beijing Olympics from Reporters Without Borders, click here.

Your rating: None
  • Login to comment
  • Text Size
  • Email