What's new

Former Chinese state journalist is jailed for 15 years after posting 'negative' reports about Commun

striver44

BANNED
Joined
Jul 25, 2016
Messages
4,832
Reaction score
-16
Country
Indonesia
Location
Indonesia
By MailOnline Reporter10:54 01 May 2020, updated 11:19 01 May 2020
27877560-0-image-a-3_1588322450857.jpg

  • Chen Jieren worked for several propaganda outlets, including the People's Daily
  • He reportedly got sacked in 2011 for voicing too much criticism against the Party
  • A court said he then published 'slanderous' articles on his social media accounts
  • Chen was sentenced to 15 years in prison yesterday and issued a £790,000 fine
  • It comes amid Beijing's free speech crackdown due to coronavirus controversy

A journalist who had worked for some of China's most powerful propaganda outlets has been jailed for 15 years after being accused of attacking the ruling Communist Party, a court has ruled.

Chen Jieren, a former editor-in-chief in the People's Daily group, is said to have posted a series of 'false', 'negative' and 'slanderous' articles about officials on his social media accounts since 2015.
He then used the influence of his reports to extorted large sums of money from the officials, a regional court alleged in a statement yesterday.

The news comes as China faces international scrutiny over its handling of the coronavirus pandemic, including questions over whether authorities covered up crucial information that could have prevented it spreading globally.

A number of high-profile activists, including two citizen journalists, have disappeared or been detained for criticising Beijing's response to the crisis amid an escalating crackdown on non-state-approved reports.

Chen's sentence is one of the harshest moves yet against free speech by China's government under President Xi Jinping, who has muzzled the press and ordered Chinese media outlets to serve the interests of the ruling Communist Party.

Chen was born to a farming family in the southern province of Hunan and went to the Law School of Tsinghua, one of China' most distinguished universities.

He served several key posts in the Chinese state-run media groups, including the editor-in-chief role of People's Forum magazine under Communist mouthpiece People's Daily.

He was sacked by People's Daily while working as the editor-in-chief of a provincial sub-channel in 2011 for 'dishing out too much criticism against the government' and 'serving as an informant for the US', according to Voice of America.
Chen and his family were detained by police in June, 2018, on suspicion of blackmailing and carrying out illegal business, according to US-based Chinese news site Radio Free Asia.

According to the article, it was suspected that his detention was related to several articles he had published, which accused an official in Hunan of gross misconduct and malfeasance on the post.

In August that year, state-run Xinhua News Agency listed several alleged crimes Chen had committed in a lengthy report that branded him as an 'internet pest'.

The report accused Chen of running a family-style online criminal gang with an 'evil' nature.

Citing police, Xinhua said Chen had set up 21 accounts on social media platforms including Weibo and Toutiao.

It is said he had used these accounts to publish more than 3,000 negative articles and his fabricated reports had sparked more than 200 cases involving negative public opinions.

On Thursday, Chen was convicted of 'picking quarrels and provoking trouble, extortion, illegal business operations and bribery', a court in central Hunan province said in a statement posted online.

The charge of 'picking quarrels and provoking trouble' is a catch-all that Chinese authorities sometimes use against people who criticise the regime.

The court statement said Chen had posted 'false' and 'negative' information online 'to hype relevant cases under the guise of providing legal advice.'

It said Chen was part of an 'evil force' along with his ex-wife and three other people that illegally accrued 7.3 million yuan (£822,000, $1 million) from their activities.

wire-27701014-1587989148-717_634x421.jpg

The news comes amid an escalating crackdown from the Chinese government on non-state-approved reports during the coronavirus pandemic. Beijing has faced criticism over its handling of the outbreak, including punishing whistleblowers and detaining activists
The Chinese Human Rights Defenders watchdog said Chen was convicted 'apparently to punish him for his political speech on WeChat and other social media platforms', calling for his immediate and unconditional release.

It said Chen had been also worked for and sacked by other state media outlets including the China Youth Daily and Beijing Daily.

Since then he had published online commentaries and investigative reports on social media.

The group accused Chinese authorities of denying Chen a fair trial.

wire-27876172-1588317052-784_634x421.jpg

Chen has been jailed for 15 years for 'picking quarrels and provoking trouble', a catch-all that Chinese authorities sometimes use against people who criticise the regime
China has faced criticism after authorities in the coronavirus origin city of Wuhan reprimanded whistle-blowers who sought to raise an early alarm about the virus, prompting accusations that the cover-up may have fuelled the pandemic.

Authorities also clamped down on Chinese citizen-journalists reporting on the pandemic's effects.

China in February expelled 13 US journalists with the New York Times, Washington Post and Wall Street Journal who were among foreign outlets reporting extensively on the coronavirus in China.

Beijing said the move was in retaliation for new restrictions on the number of Chinese nationals who can work for its state-run propaganda outlets on US soil.

But the expulsions have prompted alarm, with media organisations and the three newspapers warning that the action imperils 'access to critical information' about the pandemic.

Chinese freedom of expression has always been tightly controlled by the Communist Party but that grip has become suffocating under Xi.

26939114-8277195-Ren_Zhiqiang_a_prominent_Communist_party_member_who_criticised_X-a-15_1588326124988.jpg

Ren Zhiqiang, a prominent Communist party member who criticised Xi Jinping's handling of the coronavirus outbreak, is being investigated on suspicion of a 'severe violation of discipline and law'. In this file photo from 2012, the then real estate mogul is seen in his office in Beijing
27709294-8277195-Chen_Mei_left_Cai_Wei_right_and_Cai_s_girlfriend_surnamed_Tang_w-a-16_1588326132553.jpg

Three Beijing-based internet activists also have disappeared and are believed to be held by police for archiving censored coronavirus news stories online, a source said. Chen Mei (left), Cai Wei (right) and Cai's girlfriend surnamed Tang allegedly went missing on April 19

A Chinese court last year sentenced 'cyber-dissident' Huang Qi, whose website reported on sensitive topics including human rights, to 12 years in prison for 'leaking state secrets.'

Space for independent discussion has shrunk further this year as Xi's government has sought to deflect blame for the virus, which scientists believe emerged from a wild animal market in Wuhan.

Ren Zhiqiang, an outspoken Chinese Communist Party critic and millionaire property tycoon, was detained after he penned an essay fiercely critical of Xi's response to the outbreak.

ADVERTISEMENT
Three Beijing-based internet activists also have disappeared and are believed to be held by police for archiving censored coronavirus news stories online, a relative of one of the activists said this week.

Xu Zhiyong, an outspoken activist who openly called Chinese President Xi 'not clever enough' and demanded the leader step down over 'the coronavirus catastrophe', could be facing months of torture in secret detention, human rights groups have warned

Two whistle-blowers who tried to inform the world about the true scale of the coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan are still missing two months after vanishing from the public sight.

The whereabouts of Chen Qiushi and Fang Bing have been a mystery since February, and Chinese officials have not publicly commented on them.

The citizen journalists had sought to expose the true scale of the outbreak from the then epicentre by uploading videos to YouTube and Twitter, both banned in mainland China.

All of their dispatches revealed a grim side of Wuhan unseen on state-run Chinese media outlets.

27231488-8216929-Chen_34_who_went_to_Wuhan_to_report_about_the_coronavirus_outbre-a-41_1587556390734.jpg

Chen, 34, who went to Wuhan to report about the coronavirus outbreak independently, has not been heard from since 7pm local time on February 6, according to posts on his Twitter account
27880304-8277195-image-m-5_1588325051682.jpg

Chen, 34, has not been heard from since 7pm local time on February 6.

He arrived in Wuhan just before the city went into lockdown in hopes of providing the world with the truth of the epidemic, as he said himself.

His reports detailed horrific scenes including a woman frantically calling family on her phone as she sits next to a relative lying dead in a wheelchair and the helpless situation of patients in the overstretched hospitals.

He had been planning to visit a 'fang cang' makeshift hospital before evaporating.

His disappearance was revealed by a post on his Twitter account, which has been managed by a friend authorised to speak on his behalf.

His mother has posted a video calling for his safe return.

One of his latest posts on his Twitter read: 'Chen Qiushi once said he would be safe if all of us were brave enough to tell the truth and speak our mind. Is he safe now?

Chen Qiushi has been out of contact for 83 days after covering coronavirus in Wuhan. Please save him!'

27231534-8216929-Fang_Bin_pictured_a_Wuhan_resident_went_missing_on_February_9_af-a-45_1587556509186.jpg

Fang Bin (pictured), a Wuhan resident, went missing on February 9 after releasing a series of videos, including one showing piles of bodies being loaded into a bus (below)

Fang Bin, a Wuhan resident, went missing on February 9 after releasing a series of videos, including one showing piles of bodies being loaded into a bus.

He had been arrested arrested briefly before disappearing, it is alleged.

His last video showed hazmat-donning officers knocking on his door to measure his body temperature.

Fang is seen in the video trying to fend off the officers by telling them his temperature is normal, according to Radio Free Asia (RFA).

Another journalist Li Zehua, 25, also disappeared for about two months.

27231536-8216929-Li_Zehua_pictured_is_a_former_reporter_of_CCTV_and_said_to_be_la-a-46_1587556524785.jpg

Li Zehua (pictured) is a former reporter of CCTV and said to be last heard on February 26. Li was likely targeted by secret police after visiting the Wuhan Institute of Virology, a report said
A former employee of state broadcaster CCTV, Li was reporting from Wuhan independently. He was said to be last heard on February 26 before going missing.

Before that, he had visited a series of sensitive venues in Wuhan, such as the community that held a huge banquet despite the epidemic and the crematorium which was hiring extra staff to help carry corpses, RFA added.

The news outlet said Li was likely targeted by secret police after visiting the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

The £34million institute has been at the centre of conspiracy theories, which suggest that the killer virus originated there.

On April 22, Li reappeared in a public sight through a video on Twitter.

He claimed he was detained by plainclothes police on February 26 and was interrogated for 24 hours at a police station for 'visiting sensitive places' in Wuhan.

He said he was then taken into quarantine , first in a hotel then in his hometown.


https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...-twitter_mailonline&__twitter_impression=true

 
By MailOnline Reporter10:54 01 May 2020, updated 11:19 01 May 2020
27877560-0-image-a-3_1588322450857.jpg

  • Chen Jieren worked for several propaganda outlets, including the People's Daily
  • He reportedly got sacked in 2011 for voicing too much criticism against the Party
  • A court said he then published 'slanderous' articles on his social media accounts
  • Chen was sentenced to 15 years in prison yesterday and issued a £790,000 fine
  • It comes amid Beijing's free speech crackdown due to coronavirus controversy

A journalist who had worked for some of China's most powerful propaganda outlets has been jailed for 15 years after being accused of attacking the ruling Communist Party, a court has ruled.

Chen Jieren, a former editor-in-chief in the People's Daily group, is said to have posted a series of 'false', 'negative' and 'slanderous' articles about officials on his social media accounts since 2015.
He then used the influence of his reports to extorted large sums of money from the officials, a regional court alleged in a statement yesterday.

The news comes as China faces international scrutiny over its handling of the coronavirus pandemic, including questions over whether authorities covered up crucial information that could have prevented it spreading globally.

A number of high-profile activists, including two citizen journalists, have disappeared or been detained for criticising Beijing's response to the crisis amid an escalating crackdown on non-state-approved reports.

Chen's sentence is one of the harshest moves yet against free speech by China's government under President Xi Jinping, who has muzzled the press and ordered Chinese media outlets to serve the interests of the ruling Communist Party.

Chen was born to a farming family in the southern province of Hunan and went to the Law School of Tsinghua, one of China' most distinguished universities.

He served several key posts in the Chinese state-run media groups, including the editor-in-chief role of People's Forum magazine under Communist mouthpiece People's Daily.

He was sacked by People's Daily while working as the editor-in-chief of a provincial sub-channel in 2011 for 'dishing out too much criticism against the government' and 'serving as an informant for the US', according to Voice of America.
Chen and his family were detained by police in June, 2018, on suspicion of blackmailing and carrying out illegal business, according to US-based Chinese news site Radio Free Asia.

According to the article, it was suspected that his detention was related to several articles he had published, which accused an official in Hunan of gross misconduct and malfeasance on the post.

In August that year, state-run Xinhua News Agency listed several alleged crimes Chen had committed in a lengthy report that branded him as an 'internet pest'.

The report accused Chen of running a family-style online criminal gang with an 'evil' nature.

Citing police, Xinhua said Chen had set up 21 accounts on social media platforms including Weibo and Toutiao.

It is said he had used these accounts to publish more than 3,000 negative articles and his fabricated reports had sparked more than 200 cases involving negative public opinions.

On Thursday, Chen was convicted of 'picking quarrels and provoking trouble, extortion, illegal business operations and bribery', a court in central Hunan province said in a statement posted online.

The charge of 'picking quarrels and provoking trouble' is a catch-all that Chinese authorities sometimes use against people who criticise the regime.

The court statement said Chen had posted 'false' and 'negative' information online 'to hype relevant cases under the guise of providing legal advice.'

It said Chen was part of an 'evil force' along with his ex-wife and three other people that illegally accrued 7.3 million yuan (£822,000, $1 million) from their activities.

wire-27701014-1587989148-717_634x421.jpg

The news comes amid an escalating crackdown from the Chinese government on non-state-approved reports during the coronavirus pandemic. Beijing has faced criticism over its handling of the outbreak, including punishing whistleblowers and detaining activists
The Chinese Human Rights Defenders watchdog said Chen was convicted 'apparently to punish him for his political speech on WeChat and other social media platforms', calling for his immediate and unconditional release.

It said Chen had been also worked for and sacked by other state media outlets including the China Youth Daily and Beijing Daily.

Since then he had published online commentaries and investigative reports on social media.

The group accused Chinese authorities of denying Chen a fair trial.

wire-27876172-1588317052-784_634x421.jpg

Chen has been jailed for 15 years for 'picking quarrels and provoking trouble', a catch-all that Chinese authorities sometimes use against people who criticise the regime
China has faced criticism after authorities in the coronavirus origin city of Wuhan reprimanded whistle-blowers who sought to raise an early alarm about the virus, prompting accusations that the cover-up may have fuelled the pandemic.

Authorities also clamped down on Chinese citizen-journalists reporting on the pandemic's effects.

China in February expelled 13 US journalists with the New York Times, Washington Post and Wall Street Journal who were among foreign outlets reporting extensively on the coronavirus in China.

Beijing said the move was in retaliation for new restrictions on the number of Chinese nationals who can work for its state-run propaganda outlets on US soil.

But the expulsions have prompted alarm, with media organisations and the three newspapers warning that the action imperils 'access to critical information' about the pandemic.

Chinese freedom of expression has always been tightly controlled by the Communist Party but that grip has become suffocating under Xi.

26939114-8277195-Ren_Zhiqiang_a_prominent_Communist_party_member_who_criticised_X-a-15_1588326124988.jpg

Ren Zhiqiang, a prominent Communist party member who criticised Xi Jinping's handling of the coronavirus outbreak, is being investigated on suspicion of a 'severe violation of discipline and law'. In this file photo from 2012, the then real estate mogul is seen in his office in Beijing
27709294-8277195-Chen_Mei_left_Cai_Wei_right_and_Cai_s_girlfriend_surnamed_Tang_w-a-16_1588326132553.jpg

Three Beijing-based internet activists also have disappeared and are believed to be held by police for archiving censored coronavirus news stories online, a source said. Chen Mei (left), Cai Wei (right) and Cai's girlfriend surnamed Tang allegedly went missing on April 19

A Chinese court last year sentenced 'cyber-dissident' Huang Qi, whose website reported on sensitive topics including human rights, to 12 years in prison for 'leaking state secrets.'

Space for independent discussion has shrunk further this year as Xi's government has sought to deflect blame for the virus, which scientists believe emerged from a wild animal market in Wuhan.

Ren Zhiqiang, an outspoken Chinese Communist Party critic and millionaire property tycoon, was detained after he penned an essay fiercely critical of Xi's response to the outbreak.

ADVERTISEMENT
Three Beijing-based internet activists also have disappeared and are believed to be held by police for archiving censored coronavirus news stories online, a relative of one of the activists said this week.

Xu Zhiyong, an outspoken activist who openly called Chinese President Xi 'not clever enough' and demanded the leader step down over 'the coronavirus catastrophe', could be facing months of torture in secret detention, human rights groups have warned

Two whistle-blowers who tried to inform the world about the true scale of the coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan are still missing two months after vanishing from the public sight.

The whereabouts of Chen Qiushi and Fang Bing have been a mystery since February, and Chinese officials have not publicly commented on them.

The citizen journalists had sought to expose the true scale of the outbreak from the then epicentre by uploading videos to YouTube and Twitter, both banned in mainland China.

All of their dispatches revealed a grim side of Wuhan unseen on state-run Chinese media outlets.

27231488-8216929-Chen_34_who_went_to_Wuhan_to_report_about_the_coronavirus_outbre-a-41_1587556390734.jpg

Chen, 34, who went to Wuhan to report about the coronavirus outbreak independently, has not been heard from since 7pm local time on February 6, according to posts on his Twitter account
27880304-8277195-image-m-5_1588325051682.jpg

Chen, 34, has not been heard from since 7pm local time on February 6.

He arrived in Wuhan just before the city went into lockdown in hopes of providing the world with the truth of the epidemic, as he said himself.

His reports detailed horrific scenes including a woman frantically calling family on her phone as she sits next to a relative lying dead in a wheelchair and the helpless situation of patients in the overstretched hospitals.

He had been planning to visit a 'fang cang' makeshift hospital before evaporating.

His disappearance was revealed by a post on his Twitter account, which has been managed by a friend authorised to speak on his behalf.

His mother has posted a video calling for his safe return.

One of his latest posts on his Twitter read: 'Chen Qiushi once said he would be safe if all of us were brave enough to tell the truth and speak our mind. Is he safe now?

Chen Qiushi has been out of contact for 83 days after covering coronavirus in Wuhan. Please save him!'

27231534-8216929-Fang_Bin_pictured_a_Wuhan_resident_went_missing_on_February_9_af-a-45_1587556509186.jpg

Fang Bin (pictured), a Wuhan resident, went missing on February 9 after releasing a series of videos, including one showing piles of bodies being loaded into a bus (below)

Fang Bin, a Wuhan resident, went missing on February 9 after releasing a series of videos, including one showing piles of bodies being loaded into a bus.

He had been arrested arrested briefly before disappearing, it is alleged.

His last video showed hazmat-donning officers knocking on his door to measure his body temperature.

Fang is seen in the video trying to fend off the officers by telling them his temperature is normal, according to Radio Free Asia (RFA).

Another journalist Li Zehua, 25, also disappeared for about two months.

27231536-8216929-Li_Zehua_pictured_is_a_former_reporter_of_CCTV_and_said_to_be_la-a-46_1587556524785.jpg

Li Zehua (pictured) is a former reporter of CCTV and said to be last heard on February 26. Li was likely targeted by secret police after visiting the Wuhan Institute of Virology, a report said
A former employee of state broadcaster CCTV, Li was reporting from Wuhan independently. He was said to be last heard on February 26 before going missing.

Before that, he had visited a series of sensitive venues in Wuhan, such as the community that held a huge banquet despite the epidemic and the crematorium which was hiring extra staff to help carry corpses, RFA added.

The news outlet said Li was likely targeted by secret police after visiting the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

The £34million institute has been at the centre of conspiracy theories, which suggest that the killer virus originated there.

On April 22, Li reappeared in a public sight through a video on Twitter.

He claimed he was detained by plainclothes police on February 26 and was interrogated for 24 hours at a police station for 'visiting sensitive places' in Wuhan.

He said he was then taken into quarantine , first in a hotel then in his hometown.


https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...-twitter_mailonline&__twitter_impression=true

All criminal under the eyes of western media is some freedom fighter. :enjoy:

 Xinhua News Agency, Changsha, April 30th-On the afternoon of April 30th, the People ’s Court of Guiyang County, Hunan Province held a public hearing to announce the first trial of the defendants Chen Jieren, Chen Weiren, Liu Min, provoking trouble, extortion, illegal business, and bribery. Judgment, the defendant Chen Jieren was sentenced to 15 years in prison for crimes of provocation, extortion, illegal business, and bribery, and a fine of RMB 7.01 million; the crime of provocations for the defendant Chen Weiren The crime of extortion and extortion was sentenced to four years ’imprisonment and a fine of RMB 10,000; the defendant Liu Min was exempted from criminal punishment for the crime of provoking trouble. The defendants Chen Jieren and Liu Min stated in court that they obeyed the judgment and did not appeal.

  The Guiyang County People's Court heard through public hearings that since 2015, the defendant Chen Jie has used his “Internet Big V” identity to use the information network to publish false information or negative information with a view to maliciously speculating on related cases in order to seek illegal benefits The incident attacked and vilified the party and government, judicial organs and their staff, caused trouble, and extorted public and private property. In January 2016, the defendant Chen Jieren, his ex-wife Deng Jiangxiu (handled separately) and the defendant Liu Min registered Beijing Hualin Management Consulting Co., Ltd. The defendant Chen Jieren solicited "legal consultation" "Service", which is managed by Deng Jiangxiu and has actual control of Hualin's financial affairs, and carries out illegal and criminal activities. After the defendant Chen Jieren did not obtain legal service qualifications and lawyer practice qualifications, under the guise of providing legal consulting services, he published false information on blogs, WeChat public accounts, WeChat friends circles, and other self-media, and speculated about related cases. , Illegally intervene in engineering projects, debt disputes and litigation cases, so as to achieve the purpose of obtaining huge amounts of illegal benefits, and gradually form the head of the defendant Chen Jieren, the defendants Chen Weiren, Liu Min, and Deng Jiangxiu and Ai Qunhui (other cases) as members Gangs using information networks to carry out criminal activities, carried out 4 crimes of provocation, 2 crimes of extortion, 6 crimes of illegal business operations, and illegally profited RMB 7.326 million. From 2013 to 2016, the defendant Chen Jieren and Liu Liqun (handled in another case) paid bribes totaling RMB 5.54246 million to Li Changmao (handled in another case) of the Loudi Central Hospital of Hunan Province in order to obtain improper benefits.

  The Guiyang County People's Court held that the defendants Chen Jieren, Chen Weiren, and Liu Min fabricated false information on the information network, causing trouble and causing serious chaos in the public order. Chen Jieren has repeatedly implemented provocation campaigns; the defendants Chen Jieren and Chen Weiren used illegal possession for the purpose of distributing negative information on the information network, and then threatened and threatened the victim with the reason of helping the victim to "delete posts". Obtaining property is a huge amount, and the behavior of the two has constituted a crime of extortion; the defendant Chen Jieren violated state regulations, for the purpose of making profits, fabricating false information and distributing it through the information network, disturbing the market order, and his behavior constitutes an illegal act. Business crime, and the circumstances are particularly serious; the defendant Chen Jieren, in order to seek improper benefits, together with others gave the state staff a huge amount of property, and his behavior also constituted a crime of bribery, and the circumstances were serious. The defendants Chen Jieren and Chen Weiren committed several crimes, and should be counted and punished according to law. The public prosecution organ accused the defendant Chen Jieren of crimes of provocation, extortion, illegal business, and bribery; the defendant Chen Weiren of crimes of provocation and extortion, and the defendant Liu Min was found guilty of provocation. The defendant Chen Jieren played a major role as a rallyer, organization, and commander in the common crimes of provocation and extortion and extortion, and was the principal offender with the most serious blame. The defendant, Chen Jieren, played a secondary role in the joint crime of bribery and was an accessory. The punishment should be reduced according to law. The defendant Chen Jieren pleaded guilty and confessed to the court and may be given a lighter punishment. The defendant, Chen Weiren, was gathered by the defendant, Chen Jieren, and actively participated in provoking troubles, extortion and extortion crimes. He played a major role in joint crimes and was the principal offender. He had multiple criminal convictions and should be punished according to law. The defendant, Chen Weiren, pleaded guilty and repented in court and could also be given a lighter punishment. The defendant Liu Min only assisted the defendant Chen Jieren in committing a crime of provocation and trouble-making, played a secondary role in the joint crime, was an accomplice, and actively confessed to guilt after the return of the case, and can be exempted from punishment according to law. The court made the above judgment in accordance with the law based on the facts, nature, circumstances and degree of harm to the society of each defendant ’s crime.

  Relatives, deputies to the National People's Congress, members of the CPPCC National Committee, journalists and the masses of the defendants attended the verdict.

1125930916_15882993867041n.jpg

  This is the scene of the sentence pronounced by the People's Court of Guiyang County, Hunan Province, taken on April 30. Xinhua News Agency (photo by Cao Yong)
http://www.xinhuanet.com/2020-05/01/c_1125930916.htm
 
Back
Top Bottom