Protesters in China call for press freedom
The protesters were outside the Southern Weekly's office in Guangzhou, with one banner reading: "We want press freedom, constitutionalism and democracy".
The
demonstration in the southern city came after censors on Thursday
blocked a New Year article in the popular liberal newspaper which called
for the realisation of a "dream of constitutionalism in China" to
protect rights.
Some
of the journalists working at the newspaper said they intended to
strike over the row in Internet postings on Sunday evening.
All
Chinese media organisations are subject to instructions from government
propaganda departments, which often suppress news seen as "negative" by
the ruling Communist Party, although some publications take a more
critical stance.
On
Friday a liberal Chinese journal's website, Annals of the Yellow
Emperor, was shut down after it published an appeal for leaders to
guarantee constitutional rights, including freedom of speech and
assembly.
The
crackdown on freedom of expression comes despite pledges of change from
the new leadership, headed by president-in-waiting Xi Jinping, which
has promised a more open style of governance since the Communist Party
congress in November.
Police
allowed the demonstration, which was made up of mainly young people,
who were carrying posters and scattering chrysanthemums, a flower used
at funerals in China which has become the protesters' symbol for the
loss of press freedom.
The censorship at the Southern Weekly sparked online uproar from netizens, including the newspaper's staff.
Some
Internet reports said strike action was agreed by staff after senior
editors took control of the newspaper's posts on Weibo, China's version
of Twitter, from day-to-day journalists.
Searches
for Southern Weekly on the popular microblogging site were blocked
today. A Chinese-language editorial in the state-run Global Times, which
has links to the ruling party, said Beijing was determined to maintain
the status quo when it came to the media.
"No
matter whether these people (angered over the censorship) are happy or
not, a common sense is that it is impossible to have the kind of 'free
media' they dream of under China's social and political reality today,"
it said.
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