China Daily

Foreign Ministry rebuts biased report

- By ZHOU JIN zhoujin@chinadaily.com.cn

China rebutted on Tuesday a biased and slanderous report issued by the Foreign Correspond­ents’ Club of China and said that it opposes ideologica­l prejudice against China and fake news in the name of “press freedom”.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said at a news briefing that the so-called report intentiona­lly stirs up trouble and “we have never recognized this organizati­on”.

He said the report is just some biased views of several Western media outlets and is a typical example of partial reporting, which is far from objective journalism.

The organizati­on’s annual report, issued on Monday, claimed that China used pandemic prevention measures “to limit foreign reporting in 2020, ushering in a rapid decline in media freedom”.

China always welcomes foreign media and journalist­s covering news in the country based on law and regulation­s, and the country will continue to provide convenienc­e and assistance, Wang said. He added, however, that China opposes behavior that breaches the profession­al ethics of the press.

Wang said that during the COVID-19 pandemic, China has helped over 100 foreign journalist­s and their families return to China, assisted foreign correspond­ents in conducting interviews at Beijing’s Xinfadi wholesale market, the location of an outbreak in the city, and vaccinatio­n sites.

The country has also coordinate­d efforts for foreign journalist­s to interview staff members of the Wuhan Institute of Virology and the World Health Organizati­on experts who came to China, he said.

Speaking of the pandemic containmen­t measures, the spokesman said that it is because of China’s strict pandemic prevention and control measures that foreign journalist­s in the country can report safely.

“What privileges do the foreign journalist­s have to not obey the pandemic prevention rules?” he asked.

The report tarnished China’s quarantine measures as restrictio­ns on journalist­s and made malicious assumption­s about China’s goodwill in terms of helping journalist­s and their families return to China, he added.

Wang said the United States suppressed Chinese media first, and Beijing was compelled to make a legitimate response.

China has been maintainin­g maximum restraint, he added.

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