Special report: Dalai clique's separatist activities
condemned
By Xinhua writer Yu Zheng
BEIJING, March 25 (Xinhua) -- Some westerners believe
that the period in the run-up to the 2008 Summer Olympics is one of the best
opportunities to lambaste the Chinese government.
This is the case with Tibet. No matter what Chinese
media reported about the atrocities of the rioters in Lhasa, how they broke the
law, how unpopular the law-breakers are among Lhasa residents, the Lhasa story
line in the minds of some Western media has already been shaped -- the public
authority is evil and the protestors are vulnerable. It fits well with the
western, Christian story of David and Goliath.
Established perceptions cannot easily be altered in
arrogant minds. Once story lines are formed they often remain, and some Western
news outlets don't even bother to discover facts contradictory to their shaped
lines. With such closed mindsets, any new event is just evidence that confirms
the pre-determined line (the prejudices if you like), which is, in the Tibet
case, that the Chinese government is in the wrong.
But the arrogance is palpable in Western attitudes
towards a developing country that is going to host the Games.
Despite the pristine notion of an end to war and the
spreading of world harmony, the Olympics are now too much politicized. All
political goals will be related to the upcoming Olympics.
Self-righteousness helps boost self confidence on the
one hand, but on the other self-righteous people firmly hold to their own
standards of judgment. The self-righteous judgment, often arbitrary, contributes
to a blurring of conceptual boundaries such as, in the Tibet case, the inability
(or unwillingness) to tell right from wrong. The criminal violence in Lhasa was
repeatedly translated as a justifiable release of ethnic and religious
resentment, and thus should be treated leniently.
With cognitive blackout, some self-righteous
Westerners understandably tilt for unproven rumors, most later proven wrong,
over the official supply of information, for special interests groups over
legitimate governments. While showing sympathy for the causes advocated by those
special interests groups, they display little sympathy for the victims suffering
from the "justifiable" violence in Lhasa. Who in the Western media cares for the
young law-enforcer who was tortured by mobs when a fist-sized scoop of flesh was
ripped out of his hip? Okay, he is among the armed police, so what? Who is
concerned for the lives of five sales girls who were burnt to death by rioters?
The scenes were photo-shopped out of the picture.
To dig up the subconscious root
of arrogance and self-righteousness, I tend to resort to 'heathen aversion,' not
at all a new phenomenon. Psychological studies indicate people much more easily
accept views and attitudes of people like them, both in appearance and belief.
Uncontrolled 'heathen aversion' might lead to a lesser degree of tolerance of
different cultures, values and ethical codes. Collectivism, for instance, is
appreciated in some cultures, whereas it is discredited by others for its
tendency to trample on individual rights.
Foreigners in Tibet: Western media
reports not conform with facts
LHASA, March 24 (Xinhua) -- While some Western media
rashly accuse China of "violent crackdown" on the "peaceful protests" in Tibet,
some foreigners there disagreed.
"Many reports were not accurate," said Tony Gleason, field
director of Tibet Poverty Alleviation Fund, an American organization which helps
poor Tibetans through skill training and small sum of financing. Full story
German news television regrets error
in covering Tibet riots
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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>>> |
BERLIN, March 23 (Xinhua) -- Germany's RTL television said
on Sunday that it "regrets an error" in covering the riots in Lhasa, capital
city of China's Tibet Autonomous Region.
The TV station admitted on its website that it "used a
picture in a wrong context." Full text
German media apologize for errors in
covering Tibet riots
BERLIN, March 24 (Xinhua) -- Two German news organizations
have apologized after being accused of distorting facts in covering the riots in
Lhasa, capital city of China's Tibet Autonomous Region.
German news television N-TV on Monday admitted that a
picture and a video sequence it used on March 20 in a report about the riots in
Tibet had actually been taken in Nepal, a neighboring country of China. Full text
Netizens slam CNN's distortion of riot
picture
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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>>> |
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.
"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. Full
text