Australian media a China stooge

Advertisement

From the FT:

When Liu Qibao, China’s propaganda minister, visited Sydney last month and signed a raft of deals with Australia’s top media companies, few paid much attention.

But the fruits of that trip — a supplement produced by China Daily, the Communist party’s English-language mouthpiece, appearing in such bastions of free speech as the Sydney Morning Herald — lay bare the growing reach of China’s multibillion-dollar propaganda machine as it seeks to win hearts and minds across the globe.

…China Watch, the new monthly pullout in Fairfax Media newspapers, marked its inaugural issue with favourable coverage of China, including an article backing Beijing in its stand-off over contested waters in the South China Sea.

…“The Australians had no idea they were making big news in China’s official media — that’s how we learnt about it back in Australia — or that the party would trumpet the deal as a victory for its overseas propaganda,” says John Fitzgerald, professor at Swinburne University of Technology.

All big powers engage in public relations but, says David Shambaugh, professor at George Washington University, the scale of Beijing’s push is unprecedented. He estimates that China spends $10bn a year on external propaganda — vastly more than the US, which he says spent just $666m on public diplomacy in 2014.

…Despite the investment, many Sinologists doubt the effectiveness of Beijing’s soft power push. “Everyone seems highly aware of their objective,” says Kerry Brown, professor at King’s College London. “The result has been more, not less, suspicion.”

Controversy stoked in Australia by Beijing’s deals with Fairfax, Sky News Australia and several other local companies proves the point.

Critics point to the harder edge of Beijing’s propaganda machine, with journalists imprisoned and many foreign media websites blocked at home. Some warn that publishing Chinese propaganda alongside other news could undermine their newspapers and hand Beijing commercial influence over the way Australian journalists report on China.

…Fairfax dismisses these concerns, saying China Watch is clearly labelled and no different to other advertising content. “Our commitment to providing independent, quality journalism — including on matters relating to China — remains absolute and unchanged,” it said.

But sensitivities with regard to Sino-Australian media joint ventures have intensified following an admission last month by state broadcaster ABC of “failures in its editorial processes” regarding its flagship Australia Plus Chinese language website.

In 2014 ABC signed an exclusive deal with China’s Shanghai Media Group, which it boasted gave it the most extensive access to Chinese audiences by any western broadcaster. A recent investigation by ABC programme Media Watch found some Chinese-related news content on controversial topics was edited and removed from the Chinese-language website.

“Our review is still under way,” ABC told the FT. “ABC International has not and would not enter into any agreement to censor content.”

Welcome to the whorehouse Downunder.

About the author
David Llewellyn-Smith is Chief Strategist at the MB Fund and MB Super. David is the founding publisher and editor of MacroBusiness and was the founding publisher and global economy editor of The Diplomat, the Asia Pacific’s leading geo-politics and economics portal. He is also a former gold trader and economic commentator at The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, the ABC and Business Spectator. He is the co-author of The Great Crash of 2008 with Ross Garnaut and was the editor of the second Garnaut Climate Change Review.