China Daily (Hong Kong)

By censoring reports, West kills the truth

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“I saw the war, but we cannot speak the truth,” Sonja van den Ende, a journalist from the Netherland­s, was quoted as saying in a CCTV report.

She is one of the many journalist­s who blamed the West for its propaganda war in the Russia-Ukraine conflict during a UN Arria-formula meeting, an informal meeting of UN members, on May 6. There were some other journalist­s from France, Italy, Bulgaria and Iraq at the meeting, all of who had been “blackliste­d” and could not continue reporting from Ukraine; some reportedly even lost their jobs.

There is no bigger example of the fake “press freedom” the West boasts of. As soon as the Russia-Ukraine military conflict broke out in February, a large number of Western journalist­s rushed to Ukraine. However, it is clear from what some journalist­s themselves are saying that the West is censoring the truth.

We are not saying that whatever these journalist­s said must necessaril­y be the truth, but at least they should be given a chance to speak, so that Western audiences get to know the other side of the story in the ongoing conflict. To quote German writer and Nobel laureate Gunter Grass, truth exists only in the plural — there is no such thing as a single truth. And the Western censorship is killing that plurality.

Such a move can be detrimenta­l to the truth with access being given only to compliant voices. This way Western society will soon form a rigid but not necessaril­y accurate view about the Russia-Ukraine conflict, more specifical­ly an anti-Russian view.

And it will only worsen the ties between Russia and the West.

Peace is precious. The whole world should do all it can to end the Russia-Ukraine conflict and restore peace in the war-torn region, but that window of opportunit­y is closing as they tamper with the truth, thus prolonging the suffering of the people there.

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