Los Angeles Times

China’s censors make the coronaviru­s more lethal

If the outbreak becomes a pandemic, media controls will make it worse.

- By Sarah Cook s reports of Sarah Cook is a senior research analyst at Freedom House, director of its China Media Bulletin, and author of “Beijing’s Global Megaphone: The Expansion of Chinese Communist Party Media Influence since 2017.”

Anew coronaviru­s infections soar, it’s becoming clear that Chinese government leaders have been putting their political interests ahead of public health. This is not a surprise but a long-establishe­d pattern.

In recent days, medical experts have found evidence that the origin of the outbreak was not a seafood market in Wuhan, as the Chinese government initially reported. That evidence also suggests that the first human infections occurred in November, if not earlier, rather than in early December.

Local officials in Wuhan quashed the first reports of a SARS-like illness in the city in December, in part to maintain a positive environmen­t for a series of political meetings. Even now, there is reason to believe that the scale of infections is greater than the official figures and censors are continuing to delete investigat­ive reports by local journalist­s raising those concerns.

Analysis of leaked government censorship directives dating to 2013 by Freedom House shows that suppressio­n of public health informatio­n is commonplac­e. In 2016 and 2017, for example, public health and safety were among the two most censored categories of breaking news.

Given the rapid spread of the virus and the enormous economic effects expected, censorship and propaganda are certain to continue — and to extend beyond China’s borders — as the regime seeks to protect its hold on power and internatio­nal reputation. While Chinese authoritie­s assure domestic and internatio­nal audiences that their efforts will contain the outbreak, censors are busily deleting social media posts and journalist­s’ reporting that contradict the official narrative.

Chinese Human Rights Defenders, a nonprofit organizati­on with extensive contacts in China, has already tracked more than 300 cases of internet users who were penalized for sharing unofficial informatio­n on social media.

Beyond domestic censorship, the Chinese government is likely to use its multiprong­ed apparatus to influence foreign reporting. Localized internet shutdowns, arrests of citizen journalist­s and expulsions of foreign correspond­ents are standard tactics to halt the flow of informatio­n to internatio­nal audiences. These measures may be supplement­ed with more aggressive actions against foreign media, like harassment from Chinese diplomats or cyberattac­ks against critical outlets. Such efforts — once mostly focused on overseas Chinese media — have been deployed increasing­ly against mainstream news services in recent years.

The government’s propaganda system can also readily mobilize state media as well as more covert channels to amplify its message globally. The hundreds of diaspora outlets in 61 countries, many with a track record of uncritical pro-Beijing reporting, that participat­ed in a state-sponsored summit for Chinese-language media in October will face implicit or explicit political and economic pressure to adhere to coverage by official Chinese sources. Already, pro-Beijing outlets in the United States are parroting the official line, while Chinese state media accounts on Facebook and Twitter have spread proven fabricatio­ns.

Global disinforma­tion campaigns on social media platforms could also be deployed. Since 2017, Russian-style disinforma­tion tactics have been used to smear the government’s perceived enemies — such as Hong Kong protesters, Uighur Muslims and Chinese democracy activists — on platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, which are blocked in China. Similar campaigns could be launched, for example, to discredit Chinese medical profession­als who challenge the official version of events. Chinese-owned social media platforms such as WeChat, which is popular among Chinese speakers around the world, are a potential hotbed even for unintentio­nal misinforma­tion.

To counter the effects of Beijing’s censorship and propaganda related to the coronaviru­s, American public health agencies should make a conscious effort to relay critical updates to Chinese-speaking communitie­s through both privately owned and government­funded Chinese-language news services. U.S. officials should also protest any media interferen­ce by Chinese diplomats and security agents, and provide emergency funding to expand the capacity of online censorship circumvent­ion tools to address demand from users in China trying to access and share uncensored informatio­n on the global internet.

During any public health crisis, there is a legitimate concern that false informatio­n from any source could result in panic. But censorship of credible and important informatio­n that happens to make the Chinese government look bad could be equally harmful.

Medical experts report that the wave of infections has not yet reached its peak. In the coming months, transparen­cy about the coronaviru­s and efforts to combat it will be critical to reducing its spread.

Chinese media controls have always had deeply corrosive effects at home and abroad, but their potential threat to human life if this outbreak becomes a pandemic would be devastatin­g.

 ?? Hector Retamal AFP/Getty Images ?? A HOSPITAL in Wuhan, China. New evidence suggests that the first human infections in China occurred in November, if not earlier, rather than in December, as Chinese officials had said.
Hector Retamal AFP/Getty Images A HOSPITAL in Wuhan, China. New evidence suggests that the first human infections in China occurred in November, if not earlier, rather than in December, as Chinese officials had said.

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