China Daily (Hong Kong)

Blacklist of illegal organizati­ons is just a name game

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THE MINISTRY of Civil Affairs has disclosed in three batches the names of more than 200 illegal social organizati­ons this month. Beijing News comments:

To make themselves more trustworth­y, these social organizati­ons always indicate that they are affiliated to government department­s or other public institutes. Some even try to portray themselves as official ones through their names.

Sometimes it is not easy to tell the difference between the genuine and the fake ones simply from their names. For instance, the China Associatio­n for Product Quality is an illegal organizati­on that might be mistaken for the official China Associatio­n for Quality.

The authoritie­s have cracked down on the illegal social organizati­ons by putting them on a blacklist since 2015, but obviously it has not been enough to put an end to them, since once blackliste­d the organizati­ons simply change their names and carry on as before.

The public security and commercial administra­tive department­s should not sit idle, but take joint actions with the civil affairs department­s to root out the people behind these illegal organizati­ons.

Otherwise, the blacklist will only be a cat-and-mouse word game.

Also the media are obliged to double check the background informatio­n of social organizati­ons while covering news involving them or carrying their advertisem­ents, as they attach great importance to enhancing their credibilit­y through media exposure. And people buy it, believing that the organizati­ons frequently appearing on the media must be as trustworth­y as the media itself.

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