MON MAR 31, 2014 AT 08:37 PM PDT
Why the American media blackout on Taiwan?
Two weeks ago here
in Taipei a large group of student activists took control of the congress
building and have remained there despite police attempts to expel them.
On Sunday nearly
half a million citizens filled the streets in front of the Presidential Office
Building in support of the student action, many staying into the night to
pressure Taiwan's president to respond to student demands. It was likely the second largest citizens'
protest in the nation's history, though it may in fact have been the largest.
Taiwan's citizens
are furious that the ruling party (the Kuomintang) and its current leader, President Ma Ying-Jeou ,
have used every means at their disposal to force through a controversial trade
pact with China (the Service Trade Agreement) without proper legislative review. The trade pact gives Chinese
investors unprecedented leverage power on Taiwan's economy, which would
ultimately facilitate a future Chinese takeover of the island. President
Ma 's actions are seen
by most people here as those of an autocrat rather than a democratically
elected president. His approval
rating before this crisis even began was under 10%, which makes his
heavy-handed handling of the pact even harder to stomach.
If the country is
on edge awaiting the outcome of this tense standoff, it is even more
on edge this morning since a large gangster organization, with strong ties to
the Mainland, yesterday threatened to attack the students and expel
them from the congress building some time on April 1. This particular gangster organization isn't
known for pulling April Fool's pranks.
All in all this is the most
serious political crisis Taiwan has faced since becoming a democracy two
decades ago.
So where is the
American media?
Yes, there have
been a few print articles covering the crisis in larger media venues, but to my
knowledge there has been no televised media coverage. Also, the print articles only covered the
initial student actions and the police response. When Sunday's huge protest rally showed
Taiwanese largely behind the students (polls show around 70% support the
student demands) American media coverage ceased.
Again, as far as I
can tell, not a single American network has sent a reporter with a camera to
cover this. CNN's Asia bureau is in Hong
Kong, just a jump across the water from here.
Yet not a single CNN camera has appeared in Taipei. Apparently they're still too busy reporting
on the missing Malaysian jet, a story they've now covered in well over fifty articles
and a nonstop stream of video feed. Go
take a glance at CNN's Asia page to see if this has changed
since my writing.
I've long noted
American media's under-reporting of Taiwan. But the recent near silence is beyond
just under-reporting. I'd call it a soft news blackout. I may be wrong of course, it may just be
journalistic incompetence or budget constraints that keep reporters away, but
if CNN, for instance, can fly reporters back and forth across Asia dozens of
times to cover the missing flight 370, you'd think they could manage at least a
couple short hops from Hong Kong to cover the biggest political shakeup in
Taiwan in decades.
Why is the current crisis in Taiwan important? Several reasons.
First, contrary to
how it's usually depicted in Western media, Taiwan is not just
a "city" or "small island".
By population Taiwan is larger than Australia. Consider what that means. Imagine that two-hundred student activists
seized Australia's Parliament House in Canberra and refused to leave, the
standoff continuing for weeks. And that
Australians in support of the students flooded the capital in protest of the
prime minister. Would CNN be able to
afford a camera on the ground? Would
other networks send someone?
More important than
population, however, or at least what should be important from a Western
perspective: Taiwan is a vibrant
multiparty democracy built by a culture that is largely Chinese. This is unique in the world. And this democracy is now under siege.
China has long
claimed Taiwan as part of its territory, to the degree that Taiwanese landmarks
are regularly featured in Chinese publications promoting the glories of the
motherland. In recent years, as economic
ties to the Mainland have increased, some Taiwanese media companies have been
taken over by Chinese investors or conglomerates. That the government here has allowed
this shows two things: the willingness of many of Taiwan's elites to let the
country merge with China; unawareness among much of the population as to just
how serious a threat to democracy these media mergers really are.
Taiwan is a young
democracy, and it is evident to Westerners living here that many in the older
generation don't conceive political issues in democratic terms, but retain more
paternalist ideas of government. The
younger generation, however, is quite different in its political thinking, as has
been proven by the recently formed Sunflower Student Movement. Both their actions and words show that these
students are sharp proponents of democracy. An early article in the BBC (British
media is doing much better on this than American media) stressed the students' seriousness and
dedication.
The next few days
should be eventful here in Taipei. Nobody
knows how this standoff will end. With
this diary, however, I want to stress a different point: Nobody watching TV in the States even knows
this standoff is happening. Why
not? Is there a systemic cause of this under-reporting of Taiwan?
CNN 這次真的很反常,三大電視網也有鬼,應該是PRC 搞的。
回覆刪除原 PO 下方討論串:
刪除榮豐集團 (Grand Harvest Maeta Group Holdings, Ltd.)
Absolutely--where is the left? As an old
Taiwan hand, like me, you probably have the same experience I have of Taiwan's odd invisibility in the international psyche. Not exactly invisibility, but almost as if Taiwan were in a kind of small parallel universe, that as soon as one began speaking about Taiwan in any forum a kind of alternate universe were being evoked: sometimes the map shows nothing at all but blue sea where the island lies; other times the island appears, but when it does it's on a kind of alternate, dodgy map, one that will quickly be set aside.
This is true in culture, in sports ("Chinese Taipei"), in film, certainly in news reporting relative to politics.
This time I've been especially struck by American corporate media's total failure to send video cameras here to cover the standoff. FrederickPoland has offered a pretty good thesis as to why. But I think the factors behind this blackout are various.
Yesterday a talk show broadcast here in Taipei revealed that a Chinese corporation, 榮豐集團 (Grand Harvest Maeta Group Holdings, Ltd.), had recently either bought or invested very heavily in CNN's Asia-Pacific branch. The deal, apparently, had just gone through in recent weeks. I don't know if this claim is true and cannot find any confirmation of it online. If it is, however, voila, CNN's silence on the protests in Taiwan is crystal clear. I'm going to keep sleuthing a little, but don't expect to find anything.
I didn't see this show myself, but its contents were reported to me by a very mature, savvy, trustworthy Taiwanese friend. Who was equally surprised by the revelation, if indeed it is true.
by EricMaderLin on Tue Apr 01, 2014 at 08:20:58 PM PDT