The official Xinhua news agency said in an English-language report on March 15 that Western media organizations have "recruited a cohort of Chinese media practitioners as pawns to propagate their China-bashing rhetoric."
"The stories have distorted China's domestic and foreign policies and reinforced the highly biased image of China in the Western world, gravely violating basic professional ethics and eliminating any sense of objectivity," the report said.
Xinhua cited Western media's reports about China's initial COVID response and the human rights violations in Xinjiang state as examples of Western media's "smear campaign against China" that would not have been possible without the help from their Chinese staff.
"Chinese reporters in Western media have also cobbled together 'evidence' depicting China's so-called human rights violations," the Xinhua report claimed.
Experts are of the view that the Xinhua article reflects a worrying trend of finger-pointing at Chinese journalists associated with Western media.
Kecheng Fang, assistant professor of Media and Communications at the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), told DW that other nationalistic media outlets, too, have published similar reports.
"Some of these local journalists are now worried about their personal safety as well as the safety of their family members in China," he told DW.
"The Xinhua article criticized them for participating in China-bashing stories, but many of the journalists I have spoken to say they will continue to contribute to the China-related reporting in Western media," Fang said,...
... adding that they believe their work adds to a better understanding of China in foreign media.
According to Western China observers, accusations against local journalists working for foreign media organizations reflect the overall sense of nationalism in China.
"There is this general atmosphere of protection against the hostile intention of the 'outside,'" David Bandurski from @cnmediaproject told me.
"There is a renewed push against Chinese people who are seen as colluding. We even see the word 'hostile forces' come in. It doesn't just mean outside forces; it means people inside China who are working with these 'hostile foreign forces,'" he added.
Yangyang Cheng from @YaleLawSch's Paul Tsai China Center fears that the trend will put Chinese journalists working for foreign media in harm's way.
"In addition to potential friction with the Chinese state and its security forces, the views expressed in the [Xinhua] article, coming from an official channel, will further legitimize and incentivize harassment and online attacks on ...
... these Chinese journalists from Chinese nationalists and their sympathizers," she told DW.
A Mandarin-language article published by the state-run tabloid Global Times newspaper in February named several Chinese journalists who "defected to Western media" and stabbed the Chinese people and the country in the back.
The article revealed the names, employment histories, and photos of some Chinese journalists working for foreign media outlets, and criticized them for playing a part in the alleged Western conspiracy.
"Originally, cross-culturalism was the outstanding advantage of these people, who could bring a more objective and realistic view of the world and China to Chinese and Western readers with their unique perspectives," the article said.
"However, they [Chinese journalists] used their reports to pass the knife to the anti-China forces in the West and shoot their compatriots in the back."
Chiaoning Su, a journalism professor at Oakland University, says these measures could encourage Chinese nationalists to initiate a witch-hunt against these journalists.
"By describing these journalists as 'traitors' and denigrating their professionalism and impartiality in the field of journalism, the Chinese government is attempting to clear its name from the misconduct that they have committed," she told DW.
"They also try to distort press freedom that has been upheld by Western media into an ideological propaganda."
Yangyang Cheng from Yale Law School says it's imperative for foreign media to do more to protect their Chinese staff and their sources in China.
Experts agree that the worsening media situation in China is likely to make reporting on the country even more difficult for foreign media.
"Authoritarian countries, including China and Russia, are restricting the space for news coverage," said Chiaoning Su from Oakland University.
"As an increasing number of foreign media outlets are forced to leave China due to various reasons, they will face more challenges when it comes to their China reporting," Su said, ...
... adding that it will be difficult for them to gain the trust of the interviewees and to portray a truthful picture of the situation in the country.
"The Russians were hunting us down. They had a list of names, including ours. We had been documenting the siege of the #Ukraine city by Russian troops for more than two weeks and were the only international journalists left in the city." #Mariupolapnews.com/article/russia…
"We were reporting inside the hospital when gunmen began stalking the corridors. Surgeons gave us white scrubs to wear as camouflage.
Suddenly at dawn, a dozen soldiers burst in: “Where are the journalists, for fuck’s sake?”"
"I looked at their armbands, blue for Ukraine, and tried to calculate the odds that they were Russians in disguise. I stepped forward to identify myself. “We’re here to get you out,” they said."
Three in four Japanese people worry that #China may take military action against #Taiwan or a set of disputed islands in the East China Sea, according to a survey by the Kyodo News. fortune.com/2022/03/20/chi…
They are concerned that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could induce China to make similar offensives, respondents said in the poll conducted over the weekend.
The outcome of a separate survey Saturday by the Mainichi newspaper and Saitama University’s Social Survey Research Center showed nine in 10 Japanese are worried #China may invade #Taiwan.
Humanitarian organization Save the Children says upwards of 6 million children in #Ukraine are in imminent danger as a growing number of hospitals and schools come under attacks. dw.com/en/ukraine-six…
The organization said that 464 schools and 42 hospitals have been damaged as a resulted of repeated shelling.
According to UN figures, at least 59 children have been killed since the Russian invasion began on February 24.
"School should be a safe haven for children, not a place of fear, injury or death," Walsh said.
The bombardments have forced more than 1.5 million children to flee the country. However, Save the Children points out that nearly 6 million children remain behind.
From @AP: #China has fully militarized at least three of several islands it built in the disputed South China Sea, arming them with anti-ship and anti-aircraft missile systems, laser and jamming equipment and fighter jets ...apnews.com/article/busine…
... in an increasingly aggressive move that threatens all nations operating nearby, a top U.S. military commander said Sunday.
U.S. Indo-Pacific commander Adm. John C. Aquilino said the hostile actions were in stark contrast to Chinese President Xi Jinping’s past assurances that Beijing would not transform the artificial islands in contested waters into military bases.
Russian forces took apartment buildings and allegedly held residents hostage in their own homes: “We saw the Russian infantry on the security camera of our building,” he said. “From that moment, the Russians stayed.” #Ukrainenytimes.com/2022/03/20/wor…
“They made around 200 residents stay too, holding many of them hostage in the basements of their own buildings, forcing them to hand over their phones and taking over their apartments.
Others were able to avoid detection but still were essentially prisoners in their own homes as Russian forces moved into the buildings, which had housed 560 families, and took up sniping positions.”
"All of them were women, many with children, as that is overwhelmingly who is doing the leaving in #Ukraine today, and I realized the small stories of their lives were telling me something about the broader war, too." nytimes.com/2022/03/20/wor…
"They talked about the randomness of who survives and who does not; the sheer weirdness of the moment things change, when suddenly your body is moving in ways that your brain can’t comprehend."
"One day you are driving to the dentist. The next you are whispering with strangers in a dark basement. It is a moment when instinct — to save your children, to get through the next checkpoint — takes over and emotions are blocked."