Earthquake Opens Gap in Controls on Chinese Media
SHANGHAI
— Two and a half hours after a huge earthquake struck Sichuan Province
on Monday, an order went out from the powerful Central Propaganda
Department to newspapers throughout China. “No media is allowed to send
reporters to the disaster zone,” it read, according to Chinese
journalists who are familiar with it.
When
the order arrived, many reporters were already waiting at a Shanghai
airport for a flight to Sichuan’s provincial capital, Chengdu. A few
were immediately recalled by their editors, but two reporters from the
Shanghai newspaper The Oriental Morning Post, Yu Song and Wang Juliang,
boarded a plane anyway. Soon, they were reporting from the heart of the
disaster zone.
Their
article filled an entire page of the next day’s Post, one of the first
unofficial accounts of the tragedy by Chinese journalists. It included
a graphic description of the scene and pictures of a mourning mother, a
rescued child and corpses wrapped in white bunting. The paper further
risked offending censors by printing an all-black front page that day,
stressing the scale of the catastrophe.
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