China's CGTN able to broadcast in Britain despite ban by AFP Staff Writers Paris (AFP) March 3, 2021 The Chinese English-language news network CGTN will be able to broadcast in Britain, despite being officially banned there, as a result of a ruling by a French regulator, it emerged on Wednesday. British regulator Ofcom slapped a ban on China Global Television Network on February 4, arguing that CGTN's state-backed ownership structure violated UK law. According to Ofcom, a proposed transfer of CGTN's licence to a different media group would still keep the network tied to the Chinese Communist Party. But the Chinese network argued that, under the terms of the European Convention on Transfrontier Television (CETT), it was authorised to broadcast in another European Council member country, in theory allowing it to continue broadcasting in Britain as well. In December, the Chinese network petitioned the independent French CSA, asking it to recognise that CGTN fell under its jurisdiction, effectively amounting to an authorisation. To do so, only two technical criteria needed to be met -- CGTN had to be distributed by a French satellite, Eutelsat in this case, via a signal emitted from France. A CSA statement confirmed Wednesday that this was the case, and CGTN thus effectively falls within its jurisdiction. The legal manoeuvre could allow the Chinese network to broadcast in Europe, including Britain, without the need of prior authorisation. But the CSA can now exercise oversight of CGTN broadcasts and levy sanctions if the network incites hatred or violence, or fails to respect standards of human dignity. The French authority has already taken such measures against Middle Eastern broadcasters that it considered had committed serious violations. fpo/wai/spm
'Grandma Wong' leads brief reminder of Hong Kong's protest past Hong Kong (AFP) March 1, 2021 Alexandra Wong disappeared for more than a year into mainland China's opaque judicial system because she joined Hong Kong's democracy rallies. But that did not deter her from joining protesters outside Hong Kong's West Kowloon court on Monday as many of the democracy movement's key leaders appeared in the dock to face charges of subversion. "Today is not just about supporting the 47 people who were arrested," the 64-year-old told AFP, referring to the dozens of activists charged with conspiracy ... read more
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