The Daily Courier

China turns off news feed

Protests get nonstop coverage in Hong Kong, but not a single image in China’s state media

-

BEIJING (AP) — China’s government has cut off news about Hong Kong’s pro-democracy protests to the rest of the country, a clampdown so thorough no image of the rallies has appeared in state-controlled media, and at least one man has been detained for reposting accounts of the events.

By contrast, media in semiautono­mous Hong Kong have been broadcasti­ng nonstop about the crowds, showing unarmed students fending off tear gas and pepper spray with umbrellas as they call for more representa­tive democracy in the former British colony.

The contrast highlights the difference­s in the “one country, two systems” arrangemen­t that China’s Communist Party agreed to when it negotiated the 1997 return of Hong Kong. It also reflects Beijing’s extreme sensitivit­y about any possible sparks of prodemocra­cy protest spreading to the mainland.

“The authoritie­s see this as a matter of life and death,” said Shanghai-based columnist and independen­t analyst Zhao Chu. “They don’t see it as a local affair but a fuse that can take down their world.”

In Hong Kong, broadcaste­rs NOW and Cable TV have carried wall-to-wall coverage of the unfolding events, including student leaders storming government headquarte­rs Friday and the running clashes with police over the weekend. Hong Kong’s pro-democracy newspaper, the popular Apple Daily, has run its own live Internet feed that features aerial images of the crowds captured by a drone.

Beijing clearly has not been pleased with the unfettered coverage and has appeared to lump the Hong Kong media outlets in with foreign ones.

“Several Western media are making a big fuss, and some even have done live casts,” said an editorial on the party-run news site of the People’s Daily.

While Hong Kong enjoys civil liberties unheard of on the mainland under the “one country, two systems” arrangemen­t, the situation is vastly different in Beijing’s official media, through which the authoritie­s can largely control the narrative on any outbreaks of unrest in the mainland.

The coverage of the Hong Kong protests has been confined in mainland China to TV anchors reading brief statements with no video and text reports with no photos. The reports have mostly mentioned illegal gatherings in Hong Kong and the efforts of authoritie­s to disperse them.

The Hong Kong-based China Media Project counted only nine articles in Chinese newspapers Tuesday about the protests, six of them stemming from a news release by the official Xinhua News Agency saying the protests had hurt Hong Kong’s economy and misquoting a high-profile university administra­tor as saying students should disperse.

The other three pieces appeared in the nationalis­tic newspaper Global Times, which called the gatherings illegal, disruptive of social order and harmful to the economy.

Censorship of microblogs — including phrases such as “tear gas” — has kept online discussion muted. The image-sharing Instagram service was shut down in China over the weekend.

“The clampdown has been most thorough, covering all media — traditiona­l or new, central or local, government­al or market-oriented,” Zhao said.

Some images from Hong Kong’s streets have seeped into the mainland via cellphone messaging services. Many users have converted words into images to avoid having searchable text that can be easily caught by censors.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Protesters set up barricades to block main streets in the central business district of Hong Kong, Tuesday. Hong Kong’s leader refused to meet with pro-democracy demonstrat­ors by their midnight deadline Tuesday, despite their threats to expand the...
The Associated Press Protesters set up barricades to block main streets in the central business district of Hong Kong, Tuesday. Hong Kong’s leader refused to meet with pro-democracy demonstrat­ors by their midnight deadline Tuesday, despite their threats to expand the...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada