Tibet: School bans “separatist” ringtones

A high school near the city of Shigatse in Tibet has banned teachers and pupils from having “separatist” ringtones on their mobile phones after they were ruled “unhealthy” by local education officials. A list of 27 popular Tibetan songs was posted on the school website, and anyone caught in possession of them was warned they would be “severely dealt with”.

Quebec to ban niqab

Quebec’s legislature has introduced a bill which could ban woman wearing the niqab face veil if they wish to access public services in the province. Public debate on the controversial Bill 94 has been suspended until August after more than 60 recommendations were received in the first three days of testimony. It is now unlikely that the bill will be voted into law before the end of the current legislative session in June.

Ministry of Truth

It’s been a busy month for China’s central propaganda department (CPD).

In April, the Qinghai earthquake exposed tensions between Tibetans and the Chinese authorities. The disaster, just weeks prior to the Shanghai Expo, seemed likely to steal the limelight away from the celebrated international event. More recently the CPD’s skills have been tested by a spate of school attacks, the department responded with a press freedom clampdown, it banned reporters from interviewing the parents of the dead and injured schoolchildren. Also on the CPD’s growing list of media concerns this month were the state visit of North Korea‘s leader Kim Jong-il and last week’s China-US Human Rights Dialogue.

Faced with a possible outbreak of negative publicity, the CPD have been issuing internal “directives” on a near daily basis, the orders specify what stories news agencies can publish, how to publish them, and how to control and monitor the public discussions. Luckily for us, so widespread are these directives that there is a Chinese blog, the Ministry of Truth, dedicated to leaking these press guidelines for all to see.

Excerpts from some of the directives have been translated into English by China Digital:

17 May – Regarding sentencing of Taixing school attacker;  “only use Xinhua sources for pronouncement of first sentence, do not report death sentence, not not promote any other similar news items.”

14 May – Report “China-US Human Rights Dialogue” correctly, do not put related news on the front page, close comment sections.

12 May – [Shaanxi stabbings] …only publish the general draft from Xinhua, do not use information from other sources; do not place it in a prominent position; do not exhibit it for a long time; close the news commentary function.

11 May – News about Internet in Xinjiang must all use draft of media in Xinjiang, do not promote, do not hype.

30 April – [Shanghai Expo] … all media need to use reports from Xinhua or other central committee media; no other media should do its own reporting; no following or stopping leaders for interviews

29 April – [Taixing stabbings] … do not send reporters for interviews… Do not put it on the highlights section or on the front page. Do not give it a large title. Do not attach photos.

For more information about the Ministry of Truth, read this China Digital article.

Index on Censorship at the Hay Festival

Index at Hay
Join Index on Censorship at the Hay Literary and Arts Festival from 27 May to 6 June

Visit the Index stand in the main festival site for special Hay subscription rates, freebies and special guests.

Index will have events on both weekends of the festival. On 30 May, Chief Executive John Kampfner discusses his latest book Freedom for Sale: How We Made Money and Lost Our Liberty
More details here

On 6 June, Index on Censorship hosts a discussion on artistic ownership:
Copyright, Copyleft and Artistic Freedom in the Information Age: Who Owns the Words?, featuring David Shields, John Sutherland, Feargal Sharkey, Sarah Hunter, and Claire Armitstead

More details here

Full details of the UK’s premier literary festival at www.hayfestival.com

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