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09/12/06
China's
news controls may shut out foreign media and give Xinhua a
boost
SHANGHAI, China (AP) -- Xinhua News Agency, the official mouthpiece
for China's Communist Party, is getting a boost from the Beijing
government in its quest to become an international media power.
New rules that Xinhua issued Sept. 10 in the name of China's
Cabinet appear designed to shut out foreign news agencies
such as The Associated Press and Reuters Group PLC that have
been seeking wider access to the fast-growing Chinese market
in the run-up to the Beijing 2008 Olympics.
The regulations give Xinhua a virtual monopoly over the distribution
inside China of news, information and other services from
foreign agencies. All information will be funneled through
the state-run agency, which will censor reports.
The rules' release comes as the communist leadership has clamped
down on mainstream media and the Internet, firing and even
arresting aggressive reporters and editors.
European Union spokesman Johannes Laitenberger said Sept.
11 that the issue of freedom of expression was discussed during
the Sept. 9 EU-China summit in Helsinki, Finland, and that
the EU made clear that "we oppose strongly this sort
of restrictive practice."
European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, attending
a 38-nation Asia-Europe leaders summit in Helsinki, Finland,
called any kind of press restrictions "a very negative
development." Laitenberger said the issue would be discussed
further at human rights talks between the EU and China in
Beijing in October.
But business, not politics, is driving the new rules, industry
executives said.
"The problem is Xinhua needs money. The big media groups,
the big TV stations are rolling in money," said James
McGregor, chairman of JL McGregor & Co., a boutique investment
and consultancy company. "Xinhua, which is a government
propaganda arm, is not rolling in money and they're looking
for ways to get rich, to make Xinhua a player."
Xinhua said the new rules were intended to promote the distribution
of news and information in a "sound and orderly manner."
It said that reports that damage China's social stability,
national unity or that violate numerous other taboos are banned.
Xinhua "has the right to select the news and information
released by foreign news agencies in China and shall delete
any materials mentioned in the items above," it said.
Such restrictions could make it difficult for foreign news
agencies to ensure the integrity of their reporting, said
He Qinglian, a prominent writer who left China after her work
as an investigative journalist drew official ire.
"It's not hard to conclude that China's policies of opening
toward the outside world are at a turning point, and that
the 'open door' is growing ever narrow," He said.
Founded 75 years ago as the Red China News Agency, Xinhua
already has a near lock on the domestic distribution of general
and political news to the mainstream media, all of which is
state-controlled in China. But it has been struggling to remake
itself into a modern, profitable news organization and has
set its sights on financial news as key to its ambitions.
In a recent speech printed in a Xinhua-owned magazine, the
news agency's president, Tian Congming, described economic
information as "a new growth engine" for Xinhua.
Tian said Xinhua took the idea to the Chinese leadership,
who approved the plan.
"This is an opportunity for development that is hard
to come by and we must cling to it," Tian said.
Foreign news agencies were assessing the likely impact.
"Xinhua's new rules will have no effect on the way we
cover and provide the news globally," said Clayton Haswell,
AP's director for Asia and the Pacific. "But this raises
serious concerns for AP regarding fair trade and the free
flow of information within China."
The market for financial information has grown apace over
the past decade with China's trade and integration into the
world economy. Under a decade-old set of regulations, foreign
news agencies were allowed limited distribution of financial
data and other information.
Reuters and Bloomberg L.P. have built up client bases catering
to Chinese banks, government agencies and other institutions,
providing specialized financial information services.
"We are studying these rules closely to see how they
differ from the current guidelines and will be discussing
the details of the new regulations with Xinhua," Reuters
spokeswoman Samantha Topping said in an e-mailed statement.
Representatives of Dow Jones & Co., the owner of Dow Jones
Newswires, and Bloomberg declined to comment.
The AP reports on China for an international audience and
is trying to market photos and other products to a burgeoning
media industry.
The new regulations would change the landscape for these businesses,
requiring foreign news agencies to distribute information
through Xinhua or entities authorized by Xinhua.
"They're basically telling the world's information companies
that they have to go through a monopoly in order to distribute
their products in China," said McGregor, the investment
adviser, who as chief China representative for Dow Jones Newswires
helped fend off a similar onslaught by Xinhua in the mid-1990s.
Back then, he and others persuaded higher officials that the
plan would hurt China by shutting off free access to information.
One of the agents Xinhua may use to handle distribution of
foreign agencies' news is its subsidiary China Economic Information
Service. Little information is available about the company.
Staff who answered the phone at its headquarters said its
director was busy with meetings and not available to talk.
A description of the Economic Information Service on Xinhua's
Web site says it releases about 45 items of information daily,
five days a week -- a far cry from the round-the-clock reporting
of financial data and news offered by most international news
groups.
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