Index on Censorship
Friday, 19 July 2024
Photo: 維基小霸王

Has China entered a “garbage time of history”? Some netizens think so. According to a Guardian article from yesterday, the term is trending, coined to reflect a generation who feel squeezed by rising costs and other social burdens. Those behind the term even created a “2024 misery ranking grand slam”, which tallies up the number of misery points that a person might have earned this year (one star for unemployment, two stars for a mortgage, another for hoarding the expensive liquor Moutai and so on). I always felt bonded to many of my Chinese friends by what I’d say was a shared sense of humour – the dry, acerbic sort that Brits are famed for, the one that is still able to chortle no matter how bad the news. It’s very much on display in this story.

The censors though aren’t laughing. They’re scrubbing. Pity these people who take away the lemonade from those with lemons.

Two other stories emerged from the region this week that, while not necessarily “garbage”, were bad. The first concerned a rumour that Xi Jinping had a stroke (side note: Xi is 71, his mother is 97, and his father died aged 88). The rumour spread across Chinese social media and was picked up on X by the activist Jennifer Zeng, who has a huge following. It was later debunked, including by the Reuters Fact Check team here. In the interim, China’s censors blocked posts about it.

The story was troubling, and not just the censorship angle. There are perils to getting things wrong when you are meant to be on the side fighting for freedoms, a central one being that it’s an own goal, a way to feed into the autocrats’ line that it is others, not themselves, who can’t be trusted.

Another troubling story this week came out of Hong Kong. On Wednesday Wall Street Journal reporter Selina Cheng was laid off. The Post said it was part of a restructuring. Cheng believes it was linked to her taking up the position of chair at the Hong Kong Journalists Association, a union that campaigns for media freedom. She said she was pressed by her employer not to stand for election for chair, being told the role would be “incompatible with my employment at the Wall Street Journal”. The WSJ have not commented on her firing. But a pattern appears to be emerging of major international outlets being spooked by association with the HKJA. According to an article from the China Media Project, three recently elected members of the HKJA board, alongside an outgoing leader of the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of China, said they faced similar pressures.

“All asked to remain anonymous, fearing reprisals from their employers, but confirmed that the Journal is not alone: the biggest names in Hong Kong and China’s foreign press have been pressuring their employees to stand back and stay quiet, or face the repercussions. For the territory’s embattled journalists, defending the free press has become a fight on two fronts: against both an increasingly authoritarian government and their own employers, based in the West and nominally committed to liberal principles,” the article said.

Meanwhile Tom Grundy from Hong Kong Free Press, one of the few independent media to still operate from Hong Kong, told Index that the news added to the sense of vulnerability felt by journalists there. He said: "When a giant international news organisation fails to support the city’s only independent media union and its officers, they further erode press freedom by closing precious space. It sends a terrible signal, and makes their own remaining staff more vulnerable in the long run. Especially locals."

The Beijing-supporting media of course is loving it. The Global Times tabloid was calling the press union “a malignant tumour that harms the city’s safety and security”.

Finally, while we are talking about the WSJ, we have just heard news that the reporter Evan Gershkovich has been sentenced to 16 years in a Russian prison on espionage charges after he was arrested last March while on a reporting trip in the city of Yekaterinburg 1,600 km east of Moscow. That this news was predicable doesn’t make it any less disturbing. We will continue to fight for his release.

Jemimah Steinfeld, chief executive

Help support Index on Censorship

It’s radio silence around Venezuela’s election

In Venezuela, almost 300 radio stations have been shut down by the National Telecommunications Commission in the last two decades on charges of operating clandestinely. Opposition politicians find it almost impossible to get coverage in the run-up to the elections, says Stefano Pozzebon.  

How Russia is shaping the Syrian media narrative

Questions have been raised over the health of Syrian First Lady Asma al-Assad.
Photo: Ricardo Stuckert/Agência Brasil/ATRIBUIÇÃO 3.0 BRASIL

The flow of news has always been controlled in Syria. Yet the cases of the death of Luna Al-Shibil, one of President Bashar al-Assad's closest advisors, and the health of his wife Asma suggest media is being managed more closely than in recent times, writes Rizik al-Abi.

Rwanda polls: The Kagame “landslide” that would embarrass other dictators

Kagame's margin of victory is not a vote of confidence. Photo: Paul Kagame's office/CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Rwanda’s Paul Kagame has won 99.15% of the vote in this week’s presidential poll, a margin of victory so high that even Belarusian dictator Aliaksandr Lukashenka has baulked at claiming such a high figure in his own rigged elections, writes Clemence Manyukwe.

Belarus | Join us on 5 August for an evening of art, activism and film

Following a highly disputed election, Belarusian dictator Alyaksandr Lukashenka claimed victory in August 2020. Protests erupted and a vicious crackdown ensued. Four years on from the election, there are more than 1400 political prisoners in Belarus. Join Index on Censorship on Monday 5 August at St John's Waterloo for an evening of art, activism and film exploring the true stories of political dissidents behind bars. Book a free ticket here.

From the Index archives

UK law risks criminalising the innocent
by Danny Shaw
January 2023

 

Five Just Stop Oil protesters were jailed for a total of 21 years this week for blocking Britain's M25 motorway. Last year, Danny Shaw argued in Index that the Public Order Bill has no justification and could tear the fabric of British democratic life. Read the article here.  

 

Help support Index on Censorship
Index on Censorship defends people's freedom to express themselves without fear of harm or persecution. We publish censored writers and artists, monitor and campaign against censorship, and encourage debate.  

We rely on donations from readers and supporters. By donating to Index you help us to protect freedom of expression and to support those who are denied that right.
 
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

INDEX ON CENSORSHIP © COPYRIGHT 2023
Privacy and Cookie Policy