Under fire, US eyes Internet to reach Chinese
Washington (AFP) April 6, 2011 The US broadcasting agency said Wednesday that it saw the Internet as the future for reaching China despite its firewall, as it came under fire from lawmakers for slashing short-wave radio service. Under a budget proposal for next year, Voice of America would close its longtime radio and television broadcasts in Mandarin and eliminate its Cantonese service entirely, cutting 45 jobs and saving $8 million. The belt-tightening comes as China ramps up global distribution of its own state-run radio and television, an effort symbolized by the official Xinhua news agency's efforts to secure a spot in New York's Times Square. Representative Dana Rohrabacher, a staunch critic of China, called a congressional hearing to voice alarm at the cuts and questioned if President Barack Obama's administration was trying to curry favor with Beijing. "The $8 million 'saved' will do far more to weaken our efforts in a dictatorial and belligerent China than it will to balance the budget," said Rohrabacher, a Republican from California. He questioned the shift to an Internet platform, noting that China has worked tirelessly to build a firewall that blocks out online searches for politically sensitive topics. In response, S. Enders Wimbush, a board member of the Broadcasting Board of Governors, said the autonomous US government agency "did not plan to make it easier on Chinese authorities. In fact, we plan to make it more difficult for them." "We are going heavily into digital because that is where the audience is and, particularly, that's where the demographic is that we seek to reach," he testified. Launched in 1942, Voice of America was active during the Cold War as the US government's international broadcaster. It stopped live broadcasts in Russian in 2008. The 2012 budget still funds radio and Internet broadcasts in Mandarin and Cantonese by Radio Free Asia, a separate service founded after China's Tiananmen Square crackdown that focuses on providing news within closed Asian societies. Wimbush acknowledged concerns about the firewall but said that US broadcasters were working to circumvent it. "One can debate merits of different approaches, but the long-term approach is pretty clear: The Internet, which can be filtered, is going to play an increasingly important role; short-wave, which can be totally blocked, is going to play a less important role," he said. Traditional radio is rapidly declining in China, with 24 percent of Chinese adults listening to radio sets for news in 2006 but only eight percent doing so in 2009, Wimbush said. A survey last year found that just 0.1 percent of Chinese had listened to Voice of America's Mandarin service the previous week, he said. Some 0.4 percent listened to short-wave from any foreign broadcaster, including US services, the BBC, Radio France Internationale and Deutsche Welle. By contrast, China now has more Internet users than anywhere else. Within five years, more than 550 million Chinese -- nearly twice the whole US population -- are expected to have third-generation phones with online access. But Robert Reilly, a former director of Voice of America, said that the United States would still lose six million Chinese listeners. He said that Voice of America, unlike Radio Free Asia or commercial broadcasters, had a mission to explain the United States -- a vacuum that Chinese state media would gladly fill. "Do we need no longer explain ourselves to the world? Do we no longer need to give it our reasons? Be sure that others are willing to give reasons for us," he told the hearing. The next budget would also eliminate Voice of America's Croatian service due to improvements in press freedom in Croatia. Wimbush said Voice of America had no plans to eliminate live radio service entirely and boasted that US-run broadcasters reached 165 million people worldwide including in key nations such as Myanmar, North Korea and Zimbabwe. The BBC in January also announced cuts which spell an end to live radio programming in seven languages including Mandarin and Vietnamese.
Share This Article With Planet Earth
Related Links China News from SinoDaily.com
Bob Dylan makes China debut Beijing (AFP) April 6, 2011 Counter-culture legend Bob Dylan made his long-awaited China debut Wednesday after finally getting approval to bring his charged songs of protest and struggle to a nation where dissent is muzzled. Dylan played the Worker's Gymnasium in central Beijing to a warm reception from a mixed crowd of Chinese and foreign expatriates who brought the music icon out for a pair of encores after a roughly ... read more |
|
The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement |