From public health to politics, here are the six reporting topics Chinese authorities worked hardest to control in 2015.
BY SARAH COOK
JANUARY 6, 2016
Throughout 2015, on an almost daily basis, China’s ruling Communist Party and its state apparatus relayed detailed instructions to news outlets, websites, and social media administrators throughout the country on whether and how to cover breaking news stories and related commentary. Given the opacity of Chinese government decision-making, identifying what authorities want censored offers a unique road map for deducing what leaders consider most important, especially for protecting the Communist Party’s power. As such, Freedom House recently analyzed dozens of directives that were leaked online, revealing that the subject areas targeted for censorship by Chinese authorities are far broader than mere criticism of the regime, dissident activities, or perennially censored issues.
We analyzed all 75 leaked directives published by the California-based website China Digital Times (CDT) in 2015 that ordered “negative” actions such as deleting an article, declining to send reporters, excluding a topic from website homepages, or closing the relevant comment sections. It is difficult to verify the orders’ authenticity beyond the efforts of CDT staff, but the leaked documents often match visible shifts in coverage and are generally treated as credible by observers of Chinese media.
This collection of available directives is not exhaustive. In fact, it may only be the tip of the iceberg; one leaked order from the party’s Central Propaganda Department in September was listed as number 320 for the year. Nevertheless, an examination of the orders can provide insight into what content the party considered most sensitive.
The most commonly targeted categories of emerging news in 2015 were as follows:
The remaining directives sought to control reporting on seemingly innocuous official activity, foreign affairs, Hong Kong, and Tibet.
In 2014, Freedom House conducted a similar analysis of 318 censorship and propaganda directives published between November 2012 and May 2014. Although the samples are not all-inclusive, a comparison of the most censored topics from that period and from 2015 suggests a number of possible changes in CCP priorities.
Rank | Topic | Direction of ranking change |
---|---|---|
1 | Health and safety | ↑ (2 spots) |
2 | Economics | ↑ (5 spots) |
3 | Official wrongdoing | ↓ (2 spots) |
4 | Media/censorship | ↑ (2 spots) |
5 | Civil society | ↓ (2 spots) |
6 | Foreign affairs | ↓ (3 spots) |
It is impossible to explain conclusively the causes of these shifts. However, they appear to reflect both the increased political sensitivity of certain topics, such as the state of the Chinese economy during a slowdown, and the absence of other forces such as web users and journalists exposing official wrongdoing — and therefore needing to be censored — in an era of tightened media and Internet controls.
Yet in 2016, Chinese citizens’ need for timely, accurate information about the very topics targeted for censorship in these directives — environmental pollution, excessive police force, the economy, and others — is not going to decrease. The country’s journalists, netizens, technologists, and the international community will need to find new, creative ways to produce and disseminate news in what is increasingly looking like the most restrictive period for Chinese media in over a decade.
Graphic by C.K. Hickey.
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