Skip to main content

Police in China detain, beat Japanese reporters; Reuters staffer threatened

Hong Kong, August 6, 2008 - Reporters covering the aftermath of Monday's
attack on a border police outpost in Kashgar have been detained, beaten,
and harassed, according to international news reports.

Japan's Kyodo News Agency reported today that police in Kashgar dragged
Masami Kawakita, a photographer from the Chunichi Shimbun newspaper's Tokyo
headquarters, and Shinji Katsuta, a reporter for Nippon Television
Network's China general bureau, from a spot near the explosions that killed
16 police officers on Monday. (The Associated Press reported Kawakita's
first name as Shinzou.) The blasts have been described as a terrorist
attack.

The two journalists suffered slight injuries. Kyodo reported that "police
forcibly disrupted the Japanese journalists' reporting activities near the
base [the site of Monday morning's attack], took them to a room in a nearby
hotel, and beat them before releasing them two hours later, according to
people with knowledge of the situation."

Reuters reported that its correspondent in Kashgar, Emma Graham-Harrison,
was driven away from the attack scene by baton-wielding policemen. Reuters
said she was not injured and continues to report from Kashgar.

"It is an irony that the central government allowed foreign reporters to
travel to Kashgar unhindered, only to have them physically abused and
threatened by police once they started covering the story," said Bob Dietz,
CPJ's Asia program coordinator.

China's Foreign Ministry offered its apologies to Kawakita and Katsuta.
Xinhua reported that the Kashgar border police and the local foreign
affairs department also apologized, and that police will pay for the
repairs to their equipment.

Journalists who encounter problems reporting in China should call the CPJ
hotline at +852 6717 0591 and follow daily coverage of media issues during
the Olympics on the CPJ blog.

CPJ is a New York-based, independent, nonprofit organization that works to
safeguard press freedom worldwide. For more information, visit
http:www.cpj.org

Prachatai English's Logo

Prachatai English is an independent, non-profit news outlet committed to covering underreported issues in Thailand, especially about democratization and human rights, despite pressure from the authorities. Your support will ensure that we stay a professional media source and be able to meet the challenges and deliver in-depth reporting.

• Simple steps to support Prachatai English

1. Bank transfer to account “โครงการหนังสือพิมพ์อินเทอร์เน็ต ประชาไท” or “Prachatai Online Newspaper” 091-0-21689-4, Krungthai Bank

2. Or, Transfer money via Paypal, to e-mail address: [email protected], please leave a comment on the transaction as “For Prachatai English”