為達最佳瀏覽效果,建議使用 Chrome、Firefox 或 Microsoft Edge 的瀏覽器。

請至Edge官網下載 請至FireFox官網下載 請至Google官網下載
晴時多雲

限制級
您即將進入之新聞內容 需滿18歲 方可瀏覽。
根據「電腦網路內容分級處理辦法」修正條文第六條第三款規定,已於網站首頁或各該限制級網頁,依台灣網站分級推廣基金會規定作標示。 台灣網站分級推廣基金會(TICRF)網站:http://www.ticrf.org.tw

《TAIPEI TIMES》 BBC reporter fleeing China arrives in Taiwan: MOFA


Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokeswoman Joanne Ou speaks at a news conference at the ministry in an undated photograph.
Photo: Lu Yi-hsuan, Taipei Times

Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokeswoman Joanne Ou speaks at a news conference at the ministry in an undated photograph. Photo: Lu Yi-hsuan, Taipei Times

2021/04/02 03:00

/ AFP, BEIJING

A senior BBC correspondent who had left China after facing legal threats and pressure from authorities over his reporting, has arrived in Taiwan and is in COVID-19 quarantine, Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) spokeswoman Joanne Ou (歐江安) said yesterday.

John Sudworth on Wednesday told BBC Radio 4 that he had relocated to Taiwan after nine years in Beijing, where he reported on Xinjiang rights abuses and the COVID-19 pandemic, as it was “too risky to carry on.”

Threats from Chinese authorities had “intensified” in the past few months, he added.

At least 18 foreign correspondents were expelled by China last year, during a tit-for-tat row with the US that harmed the international press presence in the country.

Press freedom groups say that the space for foreign reporters to operate in China is increasingly tightly controlled, with journalists followed on the streets, experiencing harassment online and refused visas.

Ou said that she believes Sudworth will “feel that Taiwan is a free and democratic nation.”

From January last year to last month, 39 correspondents and 21 outlets moved to Taiwan, including the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal and the BBC, she said.

Taiwan is a free and democratic nation with a diverse and open society, and news organizations are welcome to send correspondents to work without restrictions, she said.

“The BBC has faced a full-on propaganda attack not just aimed at the organization itself, but at me personally across multiple [Chinese] Communist Party-controlled platforms,” said Sudworth, who is to continue to work as a China correspondent from Taiwan.

“We face threats of legal action, as well as massive surveillance now, obstruction and intimidation, whenever and wherever we try to film,” he said, adding that he and his family had been “followed by plainclothes police” as they left to fly out of China.

Sudworth’s wife, Irish journalist Yvonne Murray, left the country with him “because of mounting pressure from the Chinese authorities,” her employer, Radio Television of Ireland (RTE), reported.

“We left in a hurry as the pressure and threats from the Chinese government, which have been going on for some time, became too much,” she told RTE.

In the past few weeks, Chinese state media and officials have repeatedly attacked Sudworth for his reporting on alleged forced labor practices targeting Uighurs in Xinjiang’s cotton industry in particular.

On Wednesday, the Chinese embassy in Ireland said that Sudworth “has been strongly criticized by a lot of Chinese for his unfair, unobjective and biased reporting on China.”

On Twitter the embassy said: “Nobody has forced or will force” Sudworth’s wife to leave China.

The BBC confirmed Sudworth’s relocation after China’s state-run Global Times reported that he was “hiding” in Taiwan.

In the middle of last month, Xinjiang authorities said that Sudworth was the target of a civil lawsuit for producing “fake news” about the region.

Additional reporting by CNA

新聞來源:TAIPEI TIMES

不用抽 不用搶 現在用APP看新聞 保證天天中獎  點我下載APP  按我看活動辦法

焦點今日熱門
看更多!請加入自由時報粉絲團

網友回應

載入中
此網頁已閒置超過5分鐘,請點擊透明黑底或右下角 X 鈕。