White House admits censoring Chinese dissident
=========== South China Morning Post December 19, 1997 Storm over block on Wei TV broadcast; White House red-faced after censorship admission By Simon Beck The Clinton administration was in the middle of a firestorm yesterday after officials admitted blocking a global broadcast of a Wei Jingsheng interview for fear of annoying China. After winning praise for receiving Mr Wei in the White House last week, President Bill Clinton's officials were embarrassed to have to admit blocking the broadcast on the state-owned global network Worldnet. Officials tried in vain to stop the government radio station, Voice of America (VOA), from broadcasting the interview, but succeeded in blocking it from Worldnet. Both broadcasting arms are run by the official US Information Agency (USIA). The revelations have not only embarrassed the White House, but cast new light on the conditions with which Beijing asked Washington to comply in return for Mr Wei's release last month. The interference came after the US Ambassador to China, James Sasser, learned of the planned VOA interview and called the US National Security Council to express his concern. Mr Sasser feared the broadcast would break promises supposed to have been made to China that the US would not make political capital out of Mr Wei's release. He also warned it could damage US efforts to win other dissidents' release. USIA director Joseph Duffey confirmed Mr Sasser's intervention, and said: "After I learned it was going to be broadcast, I delayed the Worldnet telecast and I asked VOA not to telecast it, but they did anyway. "With Wei there was an implied commitment that our purpose was not political exploitation. That's a commitment also in the negotiations, which frankly now may be in the can." White House spokesman Mike McCurry said National Security Adviser Sandy Berger warned VOA director Evelyn Lieberman. "We would not make any effort to violate what is a very important principle - the editorial independence of VOA," he said. "At the same time, it is perfectly appropriate for VOA to understand what the consequences of some of its broadcasts might be from our perspective." Human Rights Watch Asia's Washington director Mike Jendrzejczyk was shocked at the "about-face". "We can only assume from this that not offending Beijing is more important to the administration than exerting pressure on China to release more dissidents and improve its human rights record," he said.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- In <v03007809b0c029b6e1f0@[204.254.20.2]>, on 12/19/97 at 08:42 AM, Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com> said:
"We can only assume from this that not offending Beijing is more important to the administration than exerting pressure on China to release more dissidents and improve its human rights record," he said.
I think their biggest concern is not upsetting a major contributor to their campain. :=/ Let's not forget that we have the '98 elections comming up and the Democrats need that Chinese money to help them in their bid to retake the House not to mention that the 2000 Presidential elections are not that far off. - -- - --------------------------------------------------------------- William H. Geiger III http://users.invweb.net/~whgiii Geiger Consulting Cooking With Warp 4.0 Author of E-Secure - PGP Front End for MR/2 Ice PGP & MR/2 the only way for secure e-mail. OS/2 PGP 2.6.3a at: http://users.invweb.net/~whgiii/pgpmr2.html - --------------------------------------------------------------- -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.3a-sha1 Charset: cp850 Comment: Registered_User_E-Secure_v1.1b1_ES000000 iQCVAwUBNJqaZo9Co1n+aLhhAQK4pwP/eemMiHVbPoSk6+gwVKjO8JbUVK5BMtL7 FiFnOYidEl4hwGJumkOvvj3bwi4p4xF1oYW2kFZPu/WKMWu1fcqaxrFX+8BwsElS J3DE+e7KBtg1QbdXut8OisDaowXQfLMD/wN30hlX/WnBsGR9tNsk8Fkw1jD569Kp f8CQ1Fed1NA= =Koqs -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
participants (2)
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Declan McCullagh
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William H. Geiger III