NYT Calls For Reinstatement Of Journalist Vivian Wong Expelled From China As U.S. Retaliates
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NYT Calls For Reinstatement Of Journalist Vivian Wong Expelled From China As U.S. Retaliates
Vivian Wang, a Beijing-based reporter, received an expulsion order in February after the Taiwanese president spoke at an event held by The New York Times via video. Wang was not involved in the event. Chinese officials said the expulsion was solely due to the video appearance, while The New York Times cited months of other complaints about her coverage. Her reporting focused on ordinary people and addressed sensitive topics including censorship, Beijing’s response to the coronavirus pandemic, and the expansion of China’s security state. The New York Times called the expulsion wrong, citing harassment and threats and warning that fewer American correspondents can live in and report from China. The Trump administration also revoked a U.S.-based Chinese journalist’s visa after Wang’s expulsion.
"Vivian Wang was issued an expulsion order in February, after the Taiwanese president spoke at an event held by the Times via video. Wang was not involved in the event. Though Chinese officials claimed Wangs expulsion was solely over the video appearance, the Times cited months of other reasons in their report on the subject. Chinese officials had complained for months about Ms. Wang's coverage, which focused on the lives of ordinary Chinese people and often addressed sensitive matters such as censorship, Beijing's unpopular response to the coronavirus pandemic and the steady expansion of China's security state."
"Executive Editor Joseph Kahn called for Wang's reinstatement in a statement issued on Friday. The Chinese government's decision to expel Vivian Wang is wrong, the statement read, noting that the move followed a campaign of harassment and threats directed at her over professional, accurate and even-handed reporting on the expansion of the Chinese security apparatus and its handling of the Covid epidemic. It also reflects a drastic reduction in the ability of reporters from America's leading news organizations to live in and report on China."
"The number of correspondents from American media outlets allowed to work in China has now fallen to an alarmingly low level, at a time when the need for people everywhere to understand China is greater than ever. The New York Times has been reporting on China since the 1850s, and we remain committed to covering the country fully and fairly with correspondents based in China and around the region. President Donald Trump's administration revoked a U.S.-based Chinese journalist's visa after Wang was expelled in a move that a spokesperson for the Times claimed was not requested by the outlet."
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