Special report: Dalai clique's separatist activities
condemned
BEIJING, March 23 (Xinhua) -- Tens of thousands of
netizens have answered calls to condemn CNN and a few other western media
organizations for distorting facts in covering the riot in Lhasa, capital city
of China's Tibet Autonomous Region.
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A CNN website picture shows people
running in front of a military truck. The original picture uploaded by
Chinese netizens, however, actually also shows mobsters throwing stones at
the truck.Photo
Gallery>>> |
"The fairness and objectivity of CNN is cropped,"
said one of the postings at the online forum of www.china.com., referring to a
CNN website picture showing people running in front of a military truck. The
original picture uploaded by Chinese netizens, however, actually also shows
mobsters throwing stones at the truck.
"CNN has cut the part of mobsters attacking the
military truck. That's misleading the public," said a posting by Sanfeng.
The netizens say that CNN and some western media
organizations have intentionally neglected cruelties of the mobsters, revealing
the hypocrisy of "objectivity and fairness" they had flaunted.
A CNN caption of another picture on its website said
that some "Tibetan youths" were attacking a "Chinese".
"Aren't Tibetan youths also Chinese? I doubt whether
the editor has ever studied history," said one of the postings.
The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) released a
picture on its website showing Chinese Armed Police officers helping medical
staff move a wounded person into an ambulance.
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BBC released a picture on its website
showing Chinese Armed Police officers helping medical staff move a wounded
person into an ambulance. The caption says that "there is a heavy military
presence in Lhasa," neglecting the obvious First Aid and red cross signs
on the ambulance.Photo
Gallery>>> |
The website's caption said that "there is a heavy
military presence in Lhasa", neglecting the obvious First Aid and red cross
signs on the ambulance.
German newspaper Berlin Morningpost posted a picture
on its website in which police in Lhasa rescued a young man of Han nationality
assaulted by rioters. But the caption said "insurrectionist taken away by
police".
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German newspaper Berlin Morningpost
posted a picture on its website in which police in Lhasa rescued a young
man of Han nationality assaulted by rioters. But the caption says
"insurrectionist taken away by police".Photo
Gallery>>> |
American Fox TV said in a picture's caption on its
website that Chinese military dragged some protestors onto a vehicle but
actually the uniformed people were Indian police.
N-TV, headquartered in Germany, used TV footage
showing police with captured protestors in a report on the Tibet riots. The
footage had been shot in Nepal, the police were Nepalese.
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N-TV, headquartered in Germany, used TV
footage showing police with captured protestors in a report on the Tibet
riots. The footage had been shot in Nepal, the police were
Nepalese.Photo
Gallery>>> |
Netizens at the online forum www.huanqiu.com said
that to destroy the reputation of the Chinese government with unfounded material
has been a frequently used tactic by some overseas media.
One netizen said a Canadian traveller who witnessed
the riot in Lhasa wrote in his blog: those rioters assaulted civilians and
policemen. This would have been cracked down on more severely if it had happened
in Western countries.
"Why has no major overseas media cited these words?"
the netizen complained.
The Canadian traveller also put in his blog a
photograph he had taken of Chinese Armed Police building a wall of shields to
defend against stones and bricks thrown by rioters.
Although the picture has been published by the New
York Times on its front page, the caption made no mention of the attack by the
rioters.
"Many friends working in western media consulted me
to know more about the truth of the riot in Lhasa and sent me some western media
reports," Liu Na, professor with College of Journalism and Mass Medium at Wuhan
University said in an interview with Global Times.
"Bias and even prejudice still exist in some western
media coverage about China because of old ways of thinking and different
values," said Liu, who is also a cultural scholar at the University of
Birmingham.
Xinhua has tried to contact CNN Beijing Bureau for a
comment but has so far not succeeded, because the telephone is either busy or is
not answered.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said at a press conference
held on March 18 that China will consider the possibility of organizing foreign
media to Lhasa and see on the ground what happened there.
Qin Gang, spokesman with the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, said at a regular press conference held on March 20 that efforts to
organize such a trip are under way.
According to the Manchester Guardian, a slideshow on
YouTube accuses CNN, Der Spiegel (a German newspaper), and other media of
cropping pictures to show Chinese military while screening out rioters.