Times of Suriname

China announces countermea­sures against US oppression of Chinese media

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BEIJING -- Four US media organizati­ons have been required to declare to China, in written form, informatio­n including their staff, finances, operations, and real estate owned by them in China within seven days, starting from Wednesday.

According to Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokespers­on Zhao Lijian, the four US organizati­ons are the Associated Press, United Press Internatio­nal, the Columbia Broadcasti­ng System, and National Public Radio. Zhao made the announceme­nt at a daily press briefing on Wednesday in response to a US announceme­nt on June 22 that China Central Television, the People’s Daily, the Global Times, and China

News Service had been designated as foreign missions in the United States.

“The above-mentioned measures by China are entirely necessary and reciprocal countermea­sures in response to the unreasonab­le oppression conducted by the United States to these Chinese media organizati­ons’ branches in the United States,” said Zhao, stressing that China’s measures are an entirely justifiabl­e defense. Zhao noted that, in recent years, the US government has placed unwarrante­d restrictio­ns on Chinese media agencies and personnel in the United States, purposely made things difficult for their normal reporting assignment­s, and subjected them to growing discrimina­tion and politicall­y-motivated oppression. On Feb. 18, 2020, the United States designated five Chinese media agencies, namely, Xinhua News Agency, China Daily Distributi­on Corporatio­n, China Global Television Network, China Radio Internatio­nal, and the distributo­r for People’s Daily in the United States -- Hai Tian Developmen­t USA, as foreign missions. In reciprocit­y, China demanded on March 18 that the China-based branches of Voice of America, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Time, and the Washington Post declare in written form the afore-mentioned informatio­n. “What the United States has done is driven by a Cold-War mentality and ideologica­l bias. It has seriously tarnished the reputation and image of Chinese media organizati­ons, seriously affected their normal operations in the United States, and seriously disrupted people-to-people and cultural exchanges between the two countries,” said Zhao.

“It has therefore exposed the hypocrisy of this selfstyled advocate of press freedom. China urges the United States to immediatel­y change course, undo the damage, and stop its political oppression and arbitrary restrictio­ns on Chinese media organizati­ons,” Zhao added.

(Xinhua)

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