Foreign Correspondents' Club of China (FCCC) has said that working conditions for journalists continued to decline in China in 2020 with the government harassing, intimidating and expelling reporters using all arms of state power. In its annual&nbsp;report, FCCC said that for the third consecutive year, not a single correspondent said working conditions have improved. The club interviewed as many as 150 of 220 correspondent members representing news organisations from 30 countries and regions for the purpose of the report. The report said, Beijing expelled the largest number of foreign journalists since the aftermath of the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989 – at least 18 foreign journalists from The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The Washington Post were expelled in 2020.<br />''&nbsp;<br />''It further said, all arms of state power – including surveillance systems introduced to curb coronavirus – were used to harass and intimidate journalists, their Chinese colleagues, and those whom the foreign press sought to interview. Visas became a tit-for-tat fight, as the US government capped visa numbers for Chinese journalists in America, leading to the departure of scores of Chinese, many of whom worked for state media, it added.<br />''&nbsp;<br />''China, the report added, used the pandemic to control journalists. New surveillance systems and strict controls on movement, implemented for public health reasons, were used to limit foreign journalists, it said. On many occasions, correspondents were forced to abandon reporting trips after being told to leave or be quarantined on the spot, the report said.<br />''&nbsp;<br />''Visa restrictions were also used to put pressure on reporting with at least 13 correspondents given press credentials valid for six months or less. Foreign reporters are usually granted one-year visas to be renewed annually.<br />''&nbsp;<br />''Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin dismissed it as not based on facts. He said, China always welcomes media and journalists from all countries to cover news in accordance with the laws and regulations.<br />''&nbsp;<br />''<span style="color: #222222;">The Chinese government doesn't recognize the FCCC and routinely dismisses it's annual reports on working conditions of journalists in the country.&nbsp;</span><br />
News On AIR | March 2, 2021 8:30 AM
Working conditions for journalists continued to decline in China in 2020: FCC