Hi guest, Register | Login | Contact Us
Welcome to Phayul.com - Our News Your Views
Thu 20, Jun 2013 06:50 AM (IST)  
Search:     powered by Google
 MENU
Home
News
Photo News
Opinions
Statements &
Press Releases

Book Reviews
Movie Reviews
Interviews
Travels
Health
News Discussions
News Archives
Download photos from Tibet
 Latest Stories
Rights group blasts China’s ‘Benefit the Masses’ campaign in Tibet
China’s latest monitoring scheme of Tibet Internet, phones now in place
Gyalwang Karmapa’s latest offering, The Heart is Noble, released in New Delhi
Campaigners deplore Tibet’s exclusion from G8 joint communiqué
CTA holds prayer service for Tibetan self-immolator Wangchen Dolma
Indian political parties call for review of Tibet policy
Tibet campaigners urge G8 leaders to address Tibet crisis
Wangchen Dolma passes away, Self-immolation death toll rises to 102
Sikyong Sangay concludes maiden visit to Lithuania
Latest Tibetan self-immolator identified as nun Wangchen Dolma
 Latest Photo News
Tibet's exiled spiritual leader His Holiness the Dalai Lama comforts a patient during his visit to Westmead Hospital in Sydney, Australia on June 17, 2013. The Dalai Lama is on a 11-day national tour of Australia. Live webcast of all teachings and public talks of the Dalai Lama in Australia from June 14-23, 2013 can be viewed at www.youtube.com/user/DalaiLamainAustralia. (Photo/Rusty Stewart/DLIA 2013)
Tibet's exiled spiritual leader His Holiness the Dalai Lama, right, stands alongside his Madame Tussauds wax double at the Sydney Entertainment Centre on June 14, 2013. The Dalai Lama is on a 11-day national tour of Australia. Live webcast of all teachings and public talks of the Dalai Lama in Australia from June 14-23, 2013 can be viewed at www.youtube.com/user/DalaiLamainAustralia. (Photo/Madame Tussauds Sydney via AFP - Getty Images
His Holiness the Dalai Lama enjoying a moment of laughter with members of the Reach Foundation during the first day of his eleven day visit to Australia in Sydney, Australia on June 13, 2013. Live webcast of all teachings and public talks of the Dalai Lama in Australia from June 14-23, 2013 can be viewed at www.youtube.com/user/DalaiLamainAustralia. (Photo/Rusty Stewart/DLIA 2013)
more photos »
Advertisement
Al Jazeera forced to close Beijing bureau
Phayul[Wednesday, May 09, 2012 09:33]
By Tendar Tsering

Melissa Chan, Beijing based Al Jazeera correspondent in a file photo.
Melissa Chan, Beijing based Al Jazeera correspondent in a file photo.
DHARAMSHALA, May 9: Al-Jazeera, the Qatar based news service, has been forced to close its English-language bureau in Beijing after its reporter was expelled.

China decided not to renew the press credentials and visa for Melissa Chan, al-Jazeera's China correspondent since 2007 while further refusing to allow a replacement.

Although the Chinese foreign ministry declined from saying why the reporter had been expelled, it is widely believed that Chinese officials were not happy with a documentary on labour camps in China that Al Jazeera had aired a few months back.

"We stress that everybody must abide by Chinese laws and regulations and must abide by their professional ethics," spokesman Hong Lei said, responding to repeated questions.

The Foreign Correspondents’ Club of China in a release yesterday strongly criticised Beijing for its censorship and intimidation of foreign correspondents.

“This is the most extreme example of a recent pattern of using journalist visas in an attempt to censor and intimidate foreign correspondents in China,” FCCC said.

While noting that the officials expelled Chan for violating rules and regulations that they have not specified, the FCCC said it views the incident as a “grave threat” to the foreign reporters’ ability to work in China.

Al Jazeera expressed its disappointment at Beijing’s actions and said it will continue to request a presence in China.

"We are committed to our coverage of China. Just as China’s news services cover the world freely we would expect that same freedom in China for any Al Jazeera journalist,” the news service said on its website.

Bob Dietz of the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists said Chan’s case, the first expulsion of a journalist since 1998, “marks a real deterioration in China’s media environment and sends a message that international coverage is unwanted.”

A survey by the FCCC last year had found that ninety-four percent of journalists who responded felt the work environment had deteriorated in China while seventy percent had experienced harassment or violence of some kind. A whopping 99% had said that reporting conditions in China do not meet international standards.

Earlier this year, Beijing based foreign reporters, who tried to enter the restive regions of western Tibet to cover the ongoing wave of self-immolations, were detained, kicked out of the region and threatened of visa cancellations.
Print Send Bookmark and Share
  Readers' Comments »
Be the first to comment on this article

 Other Stories
Not possible to live under China’s evil rule: A self-immolator’s last statement
Video footage of twin self-immolations reaches exile
Parading China’s flag ‘exemplary’ says Middle Way group
Al Jazeera forced to close Beijing bureau
Advertisement
Advertisement
Photo Galleries
Advertisement
Phayul.com does not endorse the advertisements placed on the site. It does not have any control over the google ads. Please send the URL of the ads if found objectionable to editor@phayul.com
Copyright © 2004-2013 Phayul.com   feedback | advertise | contact us
Powered by Lateng Online
Advertisement