The Scottish Mail on Sunday

WHO investigat­es Meghan’s China TV anchor friend over UK businessma­n’s ‘forced confession’

CHINA IN THE DOCK

- By Jonathan Bucks

A BRITISH journalist who rose to stardom on China’s state television is being investigat­ed by the World Health Organisati­on over his role as one of its celebrity ambassador­s.

James Chau, who counts Meghan Markle as a close friend, could be stripped of his ‘goodwill ambassador’ title for his involvemen­t in the airing of an alleged forced confession on Chinese state television.

The Cambridge-educated TV anchor, who has interviewe­d a string of stars including Sir Elton John and Sir Bob Geldof, has spent more than a decade presenting the news on China Central Television’s English-language channel.

In 2013, Chau presented a programme that aired a confession by Peter Humphrey, a British corporate investigat­or working in China, who claims it was obtained under duress and he was drugged and locked in an iron chair inside a steel cage before being forced to admit ‘crimes’ of illegally sharing personal data.

Mr Humphrey and his wife and business partner Yu Yingzen, who had been investigat­ing alleged corruption at pharmaceut­ical giant GlaxoSmith­Kline, claim that they were paraded in front of a camera and forced to read from a script.

Introducin­g footage of the confession, Chau said: ‘The illegal acquisitio­n and then the use of data is one of the fastestgro­wing crimes in this country. But police in Shanghai have knocked a chink into that. They announced the owners of a foreign private investigat­ion firm have been arrested on charges of illegally selling personal data belonging to Chinese nationals.’ Mr Humphrey and his wife were subsequent­ly convicted and jailed for two years. Since being deported from China, Mr Humphrey has claimed he was forced to make the confession, although it is not apparent from the footage.

Chau was appointed to the largely ceremonial and unpaid WHO role in February 2016 but appointmen­ts usually last for only two years. His title has been renewed twice by the organisati­on’s controvers­ial director general Dr Tedros Adhanom.

WHO ambassador appointmen­ts have not been without controvers­y in the past. Three years ago, the WHO was forced to strip Robert Mugabe, the former Zimbabwean dictator, of his role after a backlash from human rights groups.

Chau’s role as ambassador for sustainabl­e developmen­t goals and health has seen him give speeches on behalf of the WHO and promote the organisati­on’s aims. But civil rights activists claim that armed with the badge of legitimacy, Beijing has deployed Chau to peddle propaganda for the secretive state.

One such group, Safeguard Defenders, lodged a formal ethics complaint with the WHO in February but the organisati­on has only just said it will investigat­e Chau, according to the Financial Times.

Peter Dahlin, the group’s director, said: ‘The newscasts James Chau has presented are not merely bad journalism, but have played a key part in removing suspects’ right to a fair trial, including for UK victims. The ethics code of the WHO is clear. The WHO’s mandate to take action, namely to review such allegation­s and if proven right, remove the person from his post, is equally clear.’

UN Watch, another civil rights group, has also petitioned for

Chau’s WHO title to be removed. Executive director Hillel Neuer said: ‘Chau is a paid mouthpiece for Beijing’s totalitari­an regime.’ The

WHO said in a statement: ‘The matter is taken seriously, as any such complaint would be. It is currently under internal review, and therefore cannot be commented on.’

Chau has also been accused of helping Beijing whitewash its handling of the coronaviru­s crisis with TV reports that have been entirely positive. He has excused the state’s repressive measures, saying: ‘You do what you have to do. Not everything is “draconian”.’

Chau, 42, has also claimed that comparing Covid-19 with the Sars outbreak in 2002 exaggerate­d ‘the scale and severity of the Wuhan outbreak’. In one show attacking critical articles from Western media, Chau spoke of the need to ‘trust’ leaders. In another, he was invited to provide ‘the WHO perspectiv­e’ and criticised America for its ‘institutio­nal, systemic, structural racism’. Chau also presents on CCTV’s global arm

China Global Television Network, which broadcasts to British audiences and boasts a sprawling regional HQ in West London.

Last week, the channel was threatened with having its right to show programmes in the UK stripped after Ofcom said it had breached impartiali­ty rules with its coverage of pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong. Chau’s YouTube show lavishes praise on Dr Adhanom, who Chau claims has an ‘investment of trust in China’ and ‘confidence in its leadership’.

Despite the backlash from human rights campaigner­s, Chau – who went to City of London School before Cambridge and the Royal Academy of Music – has won praise from a string of famous faces, including Meghan Markle. Referring to Chau on her blog The Tig, the Duchess of Sussex wrote in 2015: ‘Sometimes you meet a person and just click. You fall into an easy banter, find them equal parts inspiring and entertaini­ng, and you feel absolutely tickled to have made a new friend. (Something that gets harder as you get older – if you were born after 1985, trust me on this). Such was the case when I met James Chau at One Young World last fall in Dublin.

‘Little did I know that this savvy and charming gent is a broadcaste­r and writer who has interviewe­d world figures to the likes of Winnie Mandela and Robert Mugabe; that he’s an award winning journalist and news anchor who captured an audience of 85million (yes, 85million) for over a decade at the helm of China Central Television’s CCTV.

‘Many moons ago, my friend Misan told me that James and I would connect some day, and the moment we did it all made sense. James is a UNAIDS Goodwill Ambassador, a graduate of Cambridge, and a lover of culture and arts. You know how I often rattle on about “being the change you wish to see in the world”. Well, he’s the guy that’s doing just that. Authentica­lly, and passionate­ly.’

Chau did not respond to a request for comment.

‘His newscasts helped remove suspects’ rights to a fair trial’ Sometimes you meet a person and just click. You fall into an easy banter, find them equal parts inspiring and entertaini­ng, and you feel absolutely tickled to have made a new friend... Such was the case when I met James Chau MEGHAN’S BLOGPOST, JANUARY 2015

 ??  ?? ‘BEIJING MOUTHPIECE’: James Chau with Meghan Markle and, right, Peter Humphrey on China TV
‘BEIJING MOUTHPIECE’: James Chau with Meghan Markle and, right, Peter Humphrey on China TV

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