Analysis
Screenshot of the WeChat group in which Li Wenliang talked about the outbreak, and the corresponding translations. (Source: SerpenTZA/YouTube)
The ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has launched a new campaign to crack down on “fake news” especially focussing on online content, South China Morning Post reported.
The latest move is likely to place additional burden on the country’s social media platforms to screen out unsanctioned information, likely impacting citizen journalists.
The latest crackdown against comes amid Beijing's showdown with BBC. Beijing charged BBC with peddling "fake news" especially on the channel's reporting of the floods in the central province of Henan. BBC claimed that journalists affiliated to them death threats targeting the broadcaster's correspondents initiated by the Henan branch of the CCP's Youth League.
"The BBC calls for immediate action by the Chinese government to stop the attacks on journalists following reporting on the floods in Henan Province." the broadcaster said in an official statement.
China's foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian dubbed the corporation a "bad-mouthing broadcasting corporation" that had "attacked and vilified China, seriously deviating from journalistic standards" and a producer of "fake news."
Latest crackdown by Chinese authorities will target “illegal news activities” by news organisations and staff, internet platforms and public accounts, as well as unaccredited social organisations and individuals. The crackdown will be led by Central Propaganda Department of the Communist Party
Beijing also has been irked by emergence of 'Citizen journalists; who have become more popular by leveraging social media. However unaccredited reporters in China can face legal repercussions, and possibly even criminal charges.