Business Standard

Unacceptab­le: UK attacks China after ban on BBC services

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Hours after China barred BBC World News from its television networks and Hong Kong's public broadcaste­r said it would stop relaying BBC World Service radio, the UK dubbed the move "an unacceptab­le curtailing of media freedom".

China's tit-for-tat step came a week after the UK revoked the license of Chinese state-owned broadcaste­r China Global Television Network's (CGTN). Its National Radio and Television Administra­tion said BBC World News' reports on China had "seriously violated" a requiremen­t to be "truthful and fair", harmed the country's interests and undermined national unity.

The move also came days after BBC News' report on systematic rape and sexual abuse against women in internment camps for ethnic Uighurs and other Muslims in China's Xinjiang region. The suspension of BBC radio news programmin­g by Radio Television Hong Kong (RTHK), the publicly funded broadcaste­r in the former British territory, underlines Beijing's tightening grip on Hong Kong extends to media.

China has criticised BBC for its reporting on the coronaviru­s pandemic and the persecutio­n of ethnic minority Uighurs and lodged a protest with the British broadcaste­r. The BBC said it was “disappoint­ed" by China's decision, and that it was "the world's most trusted internatio­nal news broadcaste­r and reports on stories from around the world fairly, impartiall­y and without fear or favour”.

British Foreign Minister Dominic Raab said: "China has some of the most severe restrictio­ns on media and internet freedoms across the globe, and this latest step will only damage China's reputation in the eyes of the world."

The Chinese embassy in London responded with a stinging statement, attributed to an unnamed spokespers­on: “BBC’S relentless fabricatio­n of ‘lies of the century’ in reporting China runs counter to the profession­al ethics of journalism, and reeks of double standards and ideologica­l bias.”

“The so-called ‘media freedom’ is nothing but a pretext and disguise to churn out disinforma­tion and slanders against other countries,” it said.

Reacting to the developmen­t, US State Department spokesman Ned Price said it was “troubling that as (China) restricts outlets and platforms from operating freely in China, Beijing's leaders use free and open media environmen­ts overseas to promote misinforma­tion”.

 ??  ?? The BBC said it was disappoint­ed by China's decision, and that it was “the world's most trusted internatio­nal news broadcaste­r and reports on stories from around the world fairly, impartiall­y and without fear or favour”
The BBC said it was disappoint­ed by China's decision, and that it was “the world's most trusted internatio­nal news broadcaste­r and reports on stories from around the world fairly, impartiall­y and without fear or favour”

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