Press releases & protests
ASIA PRESSE, Paris
COMMITTEE TO PROTECT JOURNALISTS, New York
HUMAN RIGHTS IN CHINA, New York
REPORTERS SANS FRONTIERES, Paris
WORLD ASSOCIATION OF NEWSPAPERS, Paris
WORLD PRESS FREEDOM COMMITTEE, Washington DC
Paris, 12 March 2008
For immediate release
Beijing Olympics 2008: Winning Press Freedom
What press freedom conditions can journalists and sports writers expect when
they go to China to cover the 2008 Summer Olympics? An international conference
designed to answer their questions, and to examine the methods that China uses
to control the press, will be held in Paris next month.
The conference, on 18 and 19 April next, will provide expert insight on the
press freedom conditions that journalists particularly sports journalists will
encounter in China.
A session on how China deals with foreign news media will feature Yuwen Wu,
News Editor of the BBC China Service, Joceyln Ford, Chair of the Media Freedoms
Committee at the Foreign Correspondents Club of China, and Fan Ho Tsai,
Chairperson of the Hong Kong Journalists Association.
Other sessions will examine press freedom and the Beijing Olympics, how the
Chinese news media is controlled, what reporting conditions can be expected for
the Olympics, the risks, opportunities and responsibilities involved with
trading with China, and the limits and the freedoms surrounding China’s
internet.
The evolving conference programme can be found at
http://www.beijing2008conference.com/home.php
The conference is organised by a coalition of press freedom groups including
the World Association of Newspapers, the World Press Freedom Committee,
Reporters Without Borders, the Committee to Protect Journalists, Human Rights in
China and Asia Presse.
Other confirmed speakers include:
- Ching Cheong, the first Hong Kong journalist convicted and jailed for
spying since Hong Kong was returned to China in 1997. Mr Cheong, the chief
correspondent for China for the Singapore Straits Times, was sentenced to five
years in prison in April 2005 and released last month following international
pressure ahead of the Olympics. He denies he ever spied against China.
- Gao Yu, a freelance Chinese journalist and laureate of the WAN Golden Pen
of Freedom and the UNESCO World Press Freedom Prize. She will speak in the
session on how China controls media along with Mr Ching and Agnes Gaudu, the
China press specialist with the French magazine Courrier International, and Bob
Dietz, the Asia Programme Director for the Committee to Protect Journalists.
- Paul Steiger, former Managing Editor of the Wall Street Journal and Chair
of the Committee to Protect Journalists, who will be joined in the session on
press freedom and the Beijing Olympics by Henrikas Yushkiavitshus, who was in
charge of press arrangements from the 1980 Moscow Olympics.
- Vincent Brossel, Head of the Asia Desk for Reporters Without Borders, who
will speak in the session on reporting conditions in China.
- Peter Scheer, Head of the California First Amendment Coalition and Greg
Walton, an expert on internet security technology with Open Flows, who will
speak in the session on trading with China.
- Watson Meng, the Founding Editor of the Boxun News website, and Yu Zhang,
the Coordinator of the Independent Chinese PEN Centre, who will speak in the
session on China’s internet.
The conference is to be introduced by Professor Merle Goldman of Harvard and
Boston Universities, a leading authority and prolific writer on civic rights in
China.
The conference has been made possible by a generous grant from the John S.
and James L. Knight Foundation.
There is no charge for attending the conference, which will be held at the
Maison de la Chimie in Paris. Conference details are available at
http://www.beijing2008conference.com/home.php
Inquiries to: Larry Kilman, Director of Communications, WAN, 7 rue Geoffroy
St Hilaire, 75005 Paris France. Tel: +33 1 47 42 85 00. Fax: +33 1 47 42 49 48.
Mobile: +33 6 10 28 97 36. E-mail: lkilman@wan.asso.fr
(Click here to go directly to the conference website)
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