When 25,000 foreign journalists descend on Beijing next month to cover the Olympics, they will face restrictions that are far from the “complete freedom” China promised in its bid for the Games.
Foreign journalists and their sources in China are enduring a system of intimidation, obstruction, surveillance and even beatings and death threats, a new report says.
The 71-page report by Human Rights Watch, to be released today, says Chinese authorities have expanded the “forbidden zones” – sensitive regions and subjects that are off-limits to foreign journalists – even as it prepares for the Olympics.
In 2001, as it was bidding for the right to hold the Olympics, China promised the international media would enjoy “complete freedom to report when they come to China” for the Olympics.
Five years later, the Chinese government announced that foreign journalists could freely conduct interviews with any consenting Chinese citizen on any “political, economic, social and cultural matters” from Jan. 1, 2007 to Oct. 17, 2008.
Both of those promises have been repeatedly violated, and media freedom has deteriorated in China since mid-2007, according to the report by Human Rights Watch, an independent human-rights organization based in New York.
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China doesn't deliver on media freedom vow
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