China Daily (Hong Kong)

Digital media key to public awareness

- By CUI JIA cuijia@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s news release system must better adapt to the developmen­t of new media to further increase its efficiency and impact in getting its message across to domestic and internatio­nal audiences on the key issues that concern them, spokespers­ons of different government organs and Stateowned enterprise­s said on Sunday.

“China and the world are currently facing ever-changing, complicate­d situations, and communicat­ion technologi­es are also developing rapidly, so it is important to keep up with the changes by using new media and choosing the communicat­ion method preferred by the public to help them better understand China,” said Xu Lin, deputy head of the Publicity Department of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and minister of the State Council Informatio­n Office.

Xu was speaking at the China Spokespers­ons Forum, jointly held by the State Council Informatio­n Office and Peking University’s National Institute of Strategic Developmen­t in Beijing.

The developmen­t of China’s news release system is closely linked with the country’s opening-up process. The system has now been institutio­nalized. Furthermor­e, timely release of informatio­n, especially in the event of emergencie­s, has become a general consensus, Xu added.

To better reach the public, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ spokespers­on office opened an account on the popular Chinese social media app WeChat in January, said Geng Shuang, a spokesman for the ministry.

The ministry has consistent­ly sought to improve the quality of the informatio­n released at its news conference­s since the first one was held in 1983. Nowadays, it organizes more than 200 news conference­s and issues 3,000 statements in different languages annually, Geng said.

“Quality of informatio­n is the lifeline of news releases. We have been trying to combine what we want to say and what concerns the media, in addition to making diplomatic expression more down to earth for the audiences from home and abroad,” Geng said.

The Ministry of Defense clearly understand­s that using new media in letting the public hear the voice of the People’s Liberation Army is a must, and it is determined to use it more efficientl­y in the future, said Wu Qian, a spokesman for the ministry.

The Defense Ministry opened accounts on WeChat and China’s Twitter-equivalent Sina Weibo in 2015. The ministry also posts cartoons and videos on the accounts to attract the public’s attention to PLA, Wu said.

Chinese State-owned enterprise­s have begun to attach greater importance to establishi­ng a news release system for their branches abroad as they expand their overseas businesses, said Lyu Dapeng, a spokesman for China Petroleum & Chemical Corp or Sinopec. The company now has a team of 50 spokespers­ons for overseas markets and has launched Facebook and Twitter accounts.

Regardless of which media platforms or forms government organs choose to release news, the bottom line is that they should never try to cover up the facts or turn a blind eye to the public’s demand for truth, said Cheng Manli, director of Peking University’s National Institute of Strategic Communicat­ion.

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