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1.9 MB

Extraction Summary

3
People
12
Organizations
5
Locations
5
Events
5
Relationships
2
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Government report / oversight document
File Size: 1.9 MB
Summary

This page from a government report details the efforts of the People's Republic of China (PRC) to influence and control Chinese-language media outlets in the United States, such as SinoVision, Qiaobao, and Sing Tao Newspaper Group. It discusses alleged financial subsidies, the ideological alignment of these publications with Beijing's official narratives, and the strategic goal of influencing the overseas Chinese community and American politics.

People (3)

Name Role Context
Wang
You Jiang
Guo Zhaojin

Timeline (5 events)

1990 start of subsidies to SinoVision
2011 letter by Wang alleging corruption
2007 interview with Guo Zhaojin
Mid-1990s divestment of Sing Tao
May 2001 joint venture establishment between Sing Tao owner and Xinhua

Locations (5)

Relationships (5)

You Jiang President of Qiaobao’s Eastern Group
Guo Zhaojin President of China News Service
Sing Tao Newspaper Group taken over by pro-PRC businessman
Xinhua News Agency joint venture with Sing Tao owner to create Xinhua Online

Key Quotes (2)

"Foreign-language media, said Guo, was a “giant hiding in plain sight.”"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020545.jpg
Quote #1
"protect the national image."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020545.jpg
Quote #2

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (2,759 characters)

86
starting in 1990, the State Council’s Overseas Chinese Affairs Office gave $800,000
a year to SinoVision, ultimately increasing its subsidy to between $2 million and
$3 million a year. Wang made this charge in a 2011 letter to the Overseas Chinese
Affairs Office alleging widespread corruption at the station.26 Allegations of corruption
and governmental subsidies have not been corroborated.
What is clear, however, is that, like Qiaobao, SinoVision’s content echoes China’s
official media. The vast majority of its stories about China, Sino-American relations,
Taiwan, Hong Kong, and other important issues for the PRC government are taken
directly from official Chinese media outlets or websites, including CCTV, Xinhua,
and the People’s Daily. In an essay, Qiaobao’s Eastern Group president, You Jiang,
defended his paper’s support of the PRC’s agenda by saying that it stemmed not
from Beijing’s direction, but from demands from pro-Chinese immigrants in the
United States.27
Forays by PRC organizations to assert direct control over Chinese-language media in
the United States sparked a battle with publications owned by private interests from
Taiwan and Hong Kong that did not share the PRC’s ideological bent. PRC officials
openly acknowledged the political nature of this battle, and in a 2007 interview, Guo
Zhaojin, the president of the state-owned China News Service, noted that if China
could gain control of Chinese-language publications in the United States, China would
be better able to influence the overseas Chinese community, have a say in American
politics, and “protect the national image.” Guo further observed that more than one-
quarter of America’s minorities relied on foreign-language media to obtain their news.
Foreign-language media, said Guo, was a “giant hiding in plain sight.”28
Beijing seems to be winning the battle with Chinese-language outlets expressing views
that dissent from Beijing’s. Over the course of the last twenty years, a series of once-
independent Chinese-language media have fallen under Beijing’s control. The Sing Tao
Newspaper Group was established in Hong Kong in 1938. In the mid-1990s, its original
owner29 was forced to divest of interests in the paper, and it was soon taken over by
a pro-PRC businessman,30 who, starting in 1998, became a member of the Chinese
People’s Political Consultative Conference, which functions as part of the broader
united front organization network. Sing Tao’s coverage of China is clearly now aligned
with that of state-run media from Beijing. In fact, in May 2001, the year he purchased
Sing Tao, the owner established a joint venture with the Xinhua News Agency to create
an information-service company known as Xinhua Online.
Media
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020545

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