Sunday Star-Times

China takes doco off air

-

CHINA HAS begun deleting an online documentar­y about the country’s air pollution problem that became an overnight sensation, notching up hundreds of millions of views.

Under the Dome took the country by storm with its vivid depiction of air pollution and its effect on the health of the nation. Made by a former reporter for the state broadcaste­r, it was available across the most popular video portals for several days.

The film was even promoted in state media, helping to explain how it reached such a staggering audience: it was viewed more than 100 million times in the first 24 hours, and more than 300 million times at last count.

Discussion on social media was widespread, and the environmen­t minister said he had texted filmmaker Chai Jing to praise her work.

But despite the initial tolerance and outright support from at least some in authority, yesterday the film began to vanish, disappeari­ng from hugely popular services including Youku and TenCent even as viewers were watching.

The page on the website of the official People’s Daily which was dedicated to the documentar­y had also been removed.

That may suggest disagreeme­nts among those in authority over the film. It may also indicate that officials feel it has already served its purpose or are alarmed by its runaway success.

‘‘It is probably a bit of both,’’ suggested Sam Geall, executive editor of China Dialogue, a bilingual site that focuses on environmen­tal issues.

‘‘ Clearly it had been checked before release … the initial praise from the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection [ signalled] it had apparently signed off on it.

‘‘I think it was intended to be out there for a little while. It’s always been something they’ve been keeping an eye on and I think it was very carefully calibrated. It highlights the way this communicat­ion is supposed to work: to push a specific line at a particular time and not to galvanise a citizens’ response.

‘‘It was calibrated as this pointed message about corruption within the energy industry and the need for new regulation­s … I don’t think it was ever intended to be a Silent Spring moment. You are talking about different actors [ making decisions] as well.’’

Figures in the energy sector had complained about aspects of the documentar­y.

The central propaganda department ordered media not to report on the documentar­y, tamping down attention without attempting to suppress the film. The Financial Times said an employee at a Shanghai newspaper had been suspended on suspicion of leaking that directive.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand