As a form of symbolism, banning a website works much more effectively than conventional expressions of official displeasure such as flexing military muscles, cancelling a trade deal, recalling a country’s ambassador or refusing a foreign correspondent’s visa.
On Monday, the ABC reported that China had banned access to its news website in the country. China gave no reasons for the ban. China does not have to justify its decision, nor does it see it as necessary to specify the nature of Australia’s offences.
The ban happens right in the middle of a federal government inquiry into the role of the national broadcaster in the Asia Pacific, particularly the ABC’s role in this endeavour. But the ABC’s attempt to speak directly to China has met with myriad obstacles. Launched in 2014 to replace the Australian Network, Australia Plus, a multi-platform service targeting the Asia-Pacific region, was criticised for publishing only soft stories in order to get around China’s censorship. Australia Plus was closed down in April this year.
A country’s national broadcaster is usually charged with the role of promoting a country’s public diplomacy to the world, but China’s ban of the ABC’s website has thrown further doubt on the ABC’s capacity to perform this role. As far as public diplomacy via media goes, this is disastrous.
But if one has to look for an upside to this saga, it is that Australia has finally graduated from a minor, harmless and benign irritant to a major source of displeasure, a status that is usually reserved for big Western media organisations such as Bloomberg, the New York Times and the BBC.
In a sense, the ABC is being penalised for the government’s actions. While the ABC is a tax-payer funded public broadcaster that strives to remain at arm’s length from the government, it is, in the eye of the Chinese government and people, a mouthpiece of the Australian government – as is the case with China’s CCTV vis-à-vis its government. So, if China wants to retaliate for the Australian government’s bypassing of Huawei, it is logical that it should block the ABC, rather than commercial media organisations, such as Fairfax.
That said, the ABC seems perfectly capable of causing offence to China on its own. Its discussions on China, Chinese communities in Australia and the Australia-China relations are uneven.
On the one hand, Radio National reliably produces a wide range of world-class programs, often with nuanced insights and balanced discussions. The “China in Focus” series in August showcased a stunning level of depth and nuance which makes news of the banning of the ABC particularly regrettable.
On the other hand, its news and current affairs coverage mostly follows and responds to a news agenda set by other outlets.
While China may not like the ABC just for doing its job – producing independent journalism – it appears to have taken particular offence at its flagship investigative program, Four Corners. The first such program was the ABC/Fairfax investigation “Power and Influence” in June 2017, which has also polarised many people in this country, and led to two legal cases.
The Four Corners episode on Monday, featuring host Sarah Ferguson’s interview with former Donald Trump aide Steve Bannon, went to air after the ban, but is symptomatic of the content that may have offended China. Some commentators on China’s social media say the ABC was giving Bannon a free run. It is not so much Bannon’s opinions that they take exception to; rather, it is the ABC’s decision to give him an exclusive interview upon his request.
The ban on the ABC website is little known in China, and has received little or any media attention there, apart from an editorial article by the Global Times. This is because banning news websites of Western media is a perennial occurrence.
To a population which is used to seeing myriad news taken down from their own social media postings on daily basis, banning a foreign media site is hardly surprising. After all, it is widely known that China has a long-standing distrust of foreign media, despite its earnest efforts to push its own media content onto the global media sphere.
The good news is that such bans work mainly on a symbolic level – people in China can still access the ABC site via VPN. Also, if past experiences of censoring websites are anything to go by, this ban is unlikely to be permanent.
Wanning Sun is Professor of Media Studies, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Technology, Sydney.
Wanning Sun is a professor of media and cultural studies at the University of Technology, Sydney. She also serves as the deputy director of the UTS Australia-China Relations Institute. She is a fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities and a member of the Australian Research Council’s College of Experts (2020-23). She is best known in the field of China studies for her ethnography of rural-to-urban migration and social inequality in contemporary China. She writes about Chinese diaspora, diasporic Chinese media, and Australia-China relations.
Comments
4 responses to “WANNING SUN. Reasons aplenty for China’s ban of the ABC.”
The closing down of the ABC in China can only be seen as an action of weakness by the Chinese. Chinese authorities are obviously concerned with views that are contrary to the officially declared orthodoxy of the Communist Party. This is nothing new and has nothing to do with security and is quite different from Australia banning Chinese software company Huawei from taking part in Australia’s 5G system. This ban is, so we are told, for security reasons, not the moulding of public opinion. While Australia should do its best to expand its trade and exchanges with China particularly now that the USA has become unreliable (if not a bit of a rogue country), it would do China’s standing in the world well if it reduced its political stronghold of its population by the communist party.
The ABC seems set to produce a string of anti-China “news” items, post-modern equivalents of the Launceston Examiner’s famous editorial, “We warn the Czar of Russia”.
Perhaps there’s another element at play, the ABC/Fairfax suit from Chau Chak Wing, who is suing them for outing him as an alleged person of influence. Chau is very close to the machine and the airing of the dirty laundry in that trial might be more of an embarrassment at home. A lot of the anti-Chau material had found a home on Chinese social media. I hope Wanning’s optimism about unleashing Auntie once more on the Chinese audience comes true – when the UTS website was banned some many years ago the ban was not lifted for many years. Though VPN did sort it for most of the Chinese aspiring to attend.
Members of any culture concerned with its long-term survival would be wise to exclude the massive and toxic output of the West’s plague of lawyers, economists, and journalists.