CBS: Not Getting The Whole Story In China
By Barry Petersen
April 21, 2006 In China, what you see is what you get, and what you get is often not the
full story. Our case in point: the woman who heckled China's President Hu Jintao Thursday
during his visit to the White House. Americans saw her protest about China's
crackdown on the Falun Gong religion. The Falun Gong are especially frightening to China's Communist leaders
because Falun Gong is an organization able to mobilize tens of thousands. The Communist Party wants to make sure there is only one such organization in
China: that would be the Communist Party. So they are a bit, shall we say, hypersensitive, about Falun Gong. Which is why the 1.3 billion Chinese who happened to watch Chinese TV or read
the government-controlled press might be excused for knowing nothing about the
protest - because the official press did not report it. The government's censors struggled valiantly to black out CNN and BBC
satellite feeds into China that showed the woman. This happens with some
frequency whenever foreign broadcasters air unflattering stories about China:
they get blocked. Foreign broadcasters know better than to try and feed such
stories OUT of China, because the censor at the satellite uplink will push his
"go to black" switch. So you can read the whole story of Hu's visit in the English-language China
Daily and see - not a single word about the protest. Indeed, next to a large front page picture of Hu and Mr. Bush, is a story
giving exquisite detail about the welcoming ceremony, which we quote: "...a
21 gun salute as national anthems played and a fife-and-drum corps paraded on a
bright spring day." The story goes on to talk about how the U.S. President asked his Chinese
counterpart for help restarting talks about North Korea's nuclear program. To get the official Chinese version, you can always go to Xinhua's English
language website for an update on the Hu visit: How about the Falun Gong protest? Sorry, there's no mention of it. The Great Wall of China's censorship does have a Great Big Hole: the
Internet. There are plenty of websites - mostly American - which are both
accessible to Chinese and are carrying the story, including video of the
protest. Which ones, you ask? Well, if I told you that, the censors would quickly go
there and block the sites. Let's just say one Report rhymes with 'sludge,' and
the others include certain broadcast networks and major newspapers in cities
like New York. Which is the reality of the world we live in, and the frustration of China's
government censors. Sorry, but I don't feel in the least bit sorry for them. As one observer
said, they're like that storybook kid who tried so hard to stop an oncoming
flood, by stopping up a hole in the dike. That was so last century. And so hopeless.
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