Beijing Review

Beijingrev­iew Designated ‘Foreign Mission’ as U.S. Ramps Up Chinese Media Suppressio­n

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The U.S. State Department has designated the U.S. operations of six more Chinese media companies as “foreign missions.” According to a list provided to the Chinese Embassy in the U.S., the six media outlets are Beijing Review, Economic Daily, Jiefang Daily, Social Sciences in China Press, Xinmin Evening News and Yicai Global (also known as China Business Network).

At a press briefing on October 21, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the move was aimed at “pushing back on Chinese Communist propaganda efforts here at home.”

In a letter sent to Beijing Review, the State Department said Beijing Review’s U.S. bureau has to register details about its property and travels and visits by its employees with the U.S. Government. It is tantamount to imposing political surveillan­ce over the daily lives of Chinese reporters in the U.S.

Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian responded on October 22, saying that the U.S. had made the move based on a Cold War mentality and ideologica­l bias, adding that the designatio­n has seriously affected China’s media operation in the U.S. and disrupted cultural exchanges between the two countries.

Associated Press called it “a move that will further foment tensions in already deteriorat­ing ties between the world’s two largest economies as President Donald Trump seeks to boost his anti-china credential­s ahead of

November’s election.”

Beijing Review, establishe­d in 1958, is China’s only national news magazine in English. Its raison d’etre is to facilitate communicat­ion between China and the rest of world by providing timely, accurate and firsthand informatio­n on economic, political and cultural developmen­ts in China. Since the first issue, it has been considered as a firsthand source on China.

As of this month, 15 Chinese media entities have been listed as “foreign missions” by the U.S.

The adding of the six media entities is the most recent activity by the U.S. to escalate tensions with China. Aside from engineerin­g the arrest of Chinese telecom company Huawei’s chief financial officer in Canada, the Trump administra­tion has closed China’s Consulate General in Houston, cooked up the conspiracy theory that a Chinese lab produced the novel coronaviru­s, indicted several Chinese citizens on espionage charges and kicked out 60 U.S.based Chinese journalist­s. It has imposed strict limits on the travels of Chinese diplomats, designated the Confucius Institutes that promote educationa­l and cultural links as “foreign missions,” and meddled in Hong Kong and Xinjiang affairs.

We strongly urge the U.S. to stop its political oppression and arbitrary restrictio­ns on Chinese media organizati­ons and bring China-u.s. relations back on track.

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