Calgary Herald

U.S. imposes new rules on state-owned Chinese media

- JONATHAN LANDAY

WASHINGTON •The trump administra­tion said on Tuesday said it will begin treating five major Chinese state-run media entities with U.S. operations the same as foreign embassies, requiring them to register their employees and U.S. properties with the State Department.

Two senior state department officials said the decision was made because China has been tightening state control over its media and President Xi Jinping has made more aggressive use of them to spread pro-beijing propaganda.

“The control over both the content and editorial control have only strengthen­ed over the course of Xi Jinping’s term in power,” said one official. “These guys are in fact arms of the CCP’S (Chinese Community Party’s) propaganda apparatus.”

The State Department informed the five entities of its decision by letter on Tuesday, the official said. The Chinese embassy did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Beijing’s control of China’s state-owned media has become “more and more draconian,” the second official said.

Both officials spoke to reporters on condition of anonymity.

Tensions between the two superpower­s have escalated since President Donald Trump came to office three years ago, with disputes ranging from trade tariffs to accusation­s of Chinese spying in the United States and to U.S. support for Taiwan.

Tuesday’s decision, the officials said, is not linked to any recent developmen­ts in Sinou.s. relations and has been under considerat­ion for some time.

The new determinat­ion is being applied to the Xinhua News Agency, China Global Television Network, China Radio Internatio­nal, China Daily Distributi­on Corp. and Hai Tian Developmen­t USA, Inc., the officials said.

China Daily is an English-language newspaper published by the Chinese Communist Party. Hai Tian Developmen­t USA distribute­s the People’s Daily, the official newspaper of the party’s Central Committee.

THE CONTROL OVER BOTH THE CONTENT AND EDITORIAL CONTROL HAVE ONLY STRENGTHEN­ED.

The five entities’ U.S. operations will have to disclose their personnel rosters and hiring and firing decisions and register properties in the United States that they rent or own with the State Department, the officials said.

They also will have to seek advanced approval before they lease or purchase new U.S. properties, they said.

One official said that the disclosure­s would help the State Department better understand how the entities operate in the United States.

Asked if there are concerns that Beijing will retaliate against Western media based in China, one official noted that foreign news outlets there already work under strict rules and that the new disclosure rules impose no restrictio­ns on the five stateowned Chinese entities’ U.S. operations.

“These guys operate in a far more liberal environmen­t here in the United States than any foreign press enjoy in the People’s Republic of China,” the official said.

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