| Home >Nation |
Latest News
![]()
| advanced search >> |
- Rural banks lend hand to farmers
- Pesticide in drink kills boy
- Craft's loss could boost country's own Mars program
- Ministry works to hasten disaster relief
- 3-D jigsaw puzzle assembles ancient army
- Taking a tough line on poverty
- Lack of focus hampers crisis fight
- Postcards sent from outer space
- Rural two-child policy gives birth to new possibilities
- Shenzhou VIII returns
1 of 0 Email
| Print
| Share
| Text Size | ![]() |
JINAN — The latest police investigation into a journalist reporting negative news has captured the attention of the All-China Journalists' Association (ACJA).
The ACJA said on Monday it is listening to all the parties involved in the case, in which police in East China's Shandong province went to Beijing to examine the circumstances surrounding a journalist's negative news report.
Police from Laiyang of Shandong summoned Wen Liang, 39, from the Beijing-based news portal qianlong.com, for questioning earlier this month.
The Beijing-based China Youth Daily reported that Wen, who previously filed a story on a biotech company in Laiyang that "cheated" to gain financing, was maintaining a low profile in his hometown in Southwest China's Sichuan province and had not returned to Beijing to meet with the police due to "fear and anger" over the investigation.
- Giving birth to civil society
- 'Science cop' says he won't be stopped
- More expat students to study in China
The latest police intervention in the field of journalism came two months after Zhejiang police wrongly accused a business reporter of allegedly damaging a corporation's reputation and placed him on a wanted list.
On Saturday, Yichun police in Northeast China's Heilongjiang province apologized for mistakenly detaining four reporters covering a plane crash in the area.
"We have received materials related to the (Laiyang) case and we are hearing voices from different parties to study the facts," Jia He, an official with the rights protection division of the ACJA, told China Daily on Monday.
Jia said complaints about inaccurate reporting are usually taken up directly with the news organization or by resorting to litigation.
However, he added, it is procedurally correct for every citizen, including Wen, to cooperate with the police during their inquiries.
According to Jia, although there appeared to be a rising number of incidents in which the police had either challenged or obstructed news reporting, there is not enough objective evidence to conclude that police intervention has become a trend.




Email
Print
Share
Text Size
