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| Wall Street Journal reporters Josh Chin (right) and Philip Wen were expelled after an op-ed headline in the newspaper that China deemed racist (AFP Photo/GREG BAKER) |
Beijing (AFP) - China on Wednesday announced it would expel American journalists from three major US newspapers in one of the communist government's biggest crackdowns on the foreign press, escalating a bitter row over media freedoms.
The move
against The New York Times, The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal
came as the superpowers also feuded over the coronavirus pandemic, with US
President Donald Trump provocatively branding it the "Chinese virus".
Beijing
said the expulsions were in retaliation to Washington's decision to cut the
number of Chinese nationals allowed to work for its state-run media on American
soil.
"They
are legitimate and justified self-defense in every sense," the foreign
ministry said of the expulsions.
It said the
journalists at the three newspapers must hand back their credentials within 10
days, and highlighted they would also not be able to work in the
semi-autonomous cities of Hong Kong and Macau.
The Foreign
Correspondents' Club of China (FCCC) said the move means at least 13 American
journalists currently working in the country would be expelled.
Beijing
also ordered the papers, as well as Voice of America and Time magazine, to
declare in writing their staff, finances, operations and real estate in China
-- rules similar to those recently imposed on Chinese state media by
Washington.
The foreign
ministry said these were "entirely necessary and reciprocal" moves
that China was "compelled to take in response to the unreasonable
oppression the Chinese media organizations experience in the US".
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US
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Beijing was wrong to equate state-run
Chinese media with independent US outlets (AFP Photo/NICHOLAS KAMM)
|
The row was
ignited last month after China expelled three other Wall Street Journal
reporters -- two Americans and one Australian -- over what it deemed a racist
headline in the newspaper.
The
headline, "China is the Real Sick Man of Asia", was on an opinion
piece that the three journalists were not involved in writing.
Those were
the first outright expulsions by China of a foreign journalist since 1998,
according to the FCCC.
The row
escalated as the US reclassified Chinese state-run media operating in the
United States as foreign missions.
On
Wednesday, the FCCC said it "deplores" the measure and warned:
"There are no winners in the use of journalists as diplomatic pawns by the
world's two pre-eminent economic powers."
US asks China to reconsider
Following
the latest expulsions, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said China was wrong
to equate its state-run media, which answer to Beijing, and independent US news
outlets that can freely report and ask critical questions.
"I
regret China's decision today to further foreclose the world's ability to
conduct the free press operations that, frankly, would be really good for the
Chinese people in these incredibly challenging global times, where more
information, more transparency are what will save lives," Pompeo told
reporters.
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US
President Donald Trump speaks during a daily press briefing on the
coronavirus
pandemic (AFP Photo/Brendan Smialowski)
|
Dean
Baquet, executive editor of The New York Times, called China's move a
"grave mistake" and voiced hope that Washington and Beijing would
quickly resolve the dispute to let journalists keep working.
The
executive editor of The Washington Post, Marty Baron, said the move was
"particularly regrettable because it comes in the midst of an
unprecedented global crisis".
Matt
Murray, editor in chief of The Wall Street Journal, called it an
"unprecedented" attack on press freedom.
Rights
groups also slammed the move, with PEN America saying it was "stunningly
misguided and a grave risk to public safety."
Human
Rights Watch expressed alarm that the ban on the expelled US journalists
extended to working in semi-autonomous Hong Kong, where the mini-constitution
enshrines free speech.
The move is
"further encroaching upon Hong Kong's limited freedom under the 'one
country, two systems' arrangement", HRW said.
The
coronavirus has already divided the US and China, with Trump and Pompeo
repeatedly speaking of the "Chinese virus" or "Wuhan virus"
-- a reference to the city where cases were first detected.
Beijing has
condemned the use of those terms, saying it is "a kind of
stigmatisation".
But Trump
has defended his terminology, telling reporters: "It did come from China,
so I think it's very accurate."



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