China / Asia

  

Journalists in Exile: 2008

More than 80 journalists flee their home countries in the last year. Iraq and Somalia are the hardest hit. By Elisbeth Witchel and Karen Phillips

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One online journalist arrested, one missing in Chengdu

New York, June 13, 2008—Chinese police arrested Internet writer Zeng Hongling in Chengdu, the capital of the earthquake-hit province of Sichuan, on Monday for publishing personal accounts of the earthquake on overseas Chinese-language Web sites, according to news reports and a Chinese press freedom advocate. Three days later, a well-known Internet publisher and human rights…

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China steps up checks on quake reporting

New York, June 6, 2008—The Committee to Protect Journalists is concerned that China has begun to restrict local and foreign coverage of the aftermath of the May 12 earthquake. Several international media outlets have reported the harassment and temporary detention of reporters at the hands of local officials. The moves come after a brief period…

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Falling Short: Olympic Promises Go Unfulfilled As China Falters on Press Freedom

To request a printed copy of this report, e-mail Development@cpj.org.

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Falling Short: Censorship at Work: The Newsroom in China

To request a printed copy of this report, e-mail Development@cpj.org.

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Falling Short: Online Rules: A Study in Paradox

To request a printed copy of this report, e-mail Development@cpj.org.

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Falling Short: What They Said

What They Said “Blending sport with culture and education, Olympism seeks to create a way of life based on the joy of effort, the educational value of good example, and respect for universal fundamental ethical principles.”—From the Olympic Charter, Fundamental Principles.

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Falling Short: Tunneling Through Stone

Tunneling Through Stone “Chinese media are evolving. They are in the process, as we say in Chinese, of ‘tunneling through stone drip by drip.’?” Li Datong has been a critic of media controls in China since January 2006, when he was removed from his position as chief editor of Freezing Point, a supplement to the…

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Falling Short: Waiting For a Verdict

Waiting For a Verdict In a July 11, 2005, letter to the chief judge of the Fuyang City Intermediate People’s Court, attorney Pu Zhiqiang rejected a proposed settlement in the civil libel case against Chen Guidi and Wu Chuntao, authors of Will the Boat Sink the Water? The Life of China’s Peasants. The attorney urged…

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Falling Short: Summary

To request a printed copy of this report, e-mail info@cpj.org.

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