Want China Times, Xinhua 2013-08-27
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| the website of the Sanxiang City Express. (Internet photo) |
The
All-China Journalists Association on Monday named and shamed three newspapers
for publishing false reports.
In one
case, a group sent by Beijing-based newspaper China Business Herald blackmailed
multiple organizations while interviewing in west China's Qinghai province in
June, and released false stories online after failing to receive hush money.
In another
case, Sanxiang City Express, a major paper based in central China's Hunan
province, published a story in May accusing officials in a local village of
neglecting their duties and conspiring with mine owners whose operations
destroyed local farmland.
Follow-up
investigations revealed abundant paddy fields in the village, with no evidence
of dereliction of duty among local officials.
The third
case involved Shenzhen Economic Daily, which published a series of stories on
illegal hospital registration fees that mixed up key definitions while failing
to interview a pivotal party.
"These
media groups and reporters' behavior seriously violate journalistic
professional ethics...resulting in a negative impression on the public while
damaging the reputation of journalists," the association said in a
statement, without details on the punishments for violators.
The
association urged media workers to draw lessons from the cases, and called on
media groups to strengthen management and correctly balance social
responsibilities and economic concerns.
References:
Sanxiang
City Express 三湘都市報
China
Business Herald 中國商報
Shenzhen Economic Daily 深圳商報

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