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China Blocks Web Access to Documentary on Nation's Air Pollution

Anees

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BEIJING: "Under the Dome," a searing documentary about China's catastrophic air pollution, had hundreds of millions of views on Chinese websites within days of its release one week ago. The country's new environment minister compared it to "Silent Spring," the landmark 1962 book that energized the environmental movement in the United States. Domestic and foreign journalists clamored to interview the filmmaker, a famous former television reporter, though she remained silent.

Then on Friday afternoon, the momentum over the video came to an abrupt halt, as major Chinese video websites deleted it under orders from the Communist Party's central propaganda department.

The startling phenomenon of the video, the national debate it set off and the official attempts to quash it reflect the deep political sensitivities in the struggle within the Chinese bureaucracy to reverse China's environmental degradation, among the worst in the world. The drama over the video has ignited speculation over which political groups were its supporters and which sought to kill it, and whether party leaders will tolerate the civic conversation and grass-roots activism that in other countries have been necessary to curbing rampant pollution.


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"It's been spirited away by gremlins," said Zhan Jiang, a professor of journalism and media studies in Beijing.

The video was made by Chai Jing, a former investigative reporter for China Central Television, with help from other former employees of the state network. It appears obvious that Chai had the cooperation of pro-environment officials in the party and government, according to interviews with state media employees and material in the documentary and on supporting websites. After the video's release, other officials, including some at state-owned enterprises that often bridle at stricter environmental regulations, came out strongly against the film. The battle lines reflected those in the broader conflict over the environment in China.

The 104-minute documentary, whose title is a reference to the grim smog that pervades daily life in many Chinese cities, had become the hottest topic of conversation among many Chinese. But by Friday evening, people in China who wanted to view it on the websites of major Internet companies like Youku and Tencent found only dead links. The website of People's Daily, the official party newspaper, had initially promoted the video and posted an interview with Chai, but those had been deleted by Friday morning.

The censors' guillotine fell a day after the start of the annual session of the National People's Congress, the party-controlled legislature that is supposed to represent official candor and accountability.

In recent years, there has been fast-growing anxiety among middle-class Chinese over fatal, widespread pollution of the air, water and soil resulting from a lack of environmental regulations governing industries. Chai's self-financed documentary touched nerves in part because she voiced those concerns in a straightforward manner, from the perspective of an average citizen. The video had the polished format of a PowerPoint presentation or TED Talk, with Chai presenting sobering scientific facts to an audience from a stage while dressed simply in a white blouse and jeans. Chai, 39, hooked viewers, too, by talking candidly about her fears of the threats posed by air pollution to her infant daughter's health - a common concern among Chinese parents.

Chai tackled the politics of environmental regulation in the video by showing how little power officials at the Ministry of Environmental Protection have to enforce anti-pollution laws. As portrayed in the film, their nemeses are large state-owned enterprises and some private companies, among them oil and gas businesses, steel producers and automakers.

The film includes interviews with officials from the Ministry of Environmental Protection talking about their inability to regulate those companies. Last Sunday, the new environment minister, Chen Jining, compared the video to Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring" in an inaugural news conference with Chinese reporters in Beijing.

"I think this work has an important role in promoting public awareness of environmental health issues, so I'm particularly pleased about this event," Chen said, according to Chinese news reports.

Though Chai had help from that ministry's officials in the making of her film and appeared to empathize with their plight, she knew there were political red lines, friends and advisers of hers have said. In the final cut, she avoided broad criticisms of China's political system. An investigative journalist and friend of Chai, Yuan Ling, said by telephone that a longer version of the film had a section in which Chai argued that the air pollution was a result of China's political system and development model, and that China would have to change these to heal the environment.

"This part of the film was unbearably heavy, dark and despairing," Yuan said. Chai decided to cut it.

In the interview on the People's Daily website, now deleted, Chai said she sent some of her interview material to official groups, including the legal committee of the National People's Congress and a government team working on changing the oil and gas industries. She received feedback from both groups, she said.

Despite such official support, attempts to stifle or criticize the video grew after its release, as officials grappled with its surging popularity.

Early this week, propaganda officials issued a directive telling Chinese news organizations not to report on the film and ordered video websites not to play it on their home pages, though those sites could keep it online. Editors at Global Times, a populist newspaper under the management of People's Daily, had to kill articles and opinion pieces that separately criticized and supported Chai's documentary, newspaper employees said.

Some officials of state-owned enterprises vented their fury. One senior oil company official, Wan Zhanxiang, wrote an essay for Cubeoil.com that attacked Chai's arguments.

"Maybe she doesn't have enough brains and not enough knowledge or thoughts," he wrote. "Anyway, she has no insights."

Some critics said online that Chai had received foreign financing for her documentary, even though she had said in the People's Daily interview that she had spent about $160,000 of her own money to make the film. The money came from earnings from her books, she said.

The uproar over the documentary occurred at a politically sensitive time - during the opening week of this year's meeting of the National People's Congress, when party and government officials gather in Beijing to discuss broad policy matters. There has been speculation online that Chai's documentary and the timing of its release were part of an effort by the Ministry of Environmental Protection to push party leaders this week to support greater regulatory powers against state-owned enterprises and other companies.

Yuan, Chai's friend, called that a "conspiracy theory" and said such a move would have been "too risky for the ministry."

After a week of passionate public discourse over the film, the central propaganda department told websites Friday to remove "Under the Dome." Zhan, the journalism and media studies professor, said officials had waited through the week "to see what would happen, in sort of an opportunistic strategy."

Those in China who wanted to view the film on Friday afternoon had to search for it in obscure corners of the Chinese Internet or go to sites like YouTube, which is blocked here but is accessible with work-around software.

On Friday evening, Xinhua, the state news agency, posted on Twitter, which is also blocked here, that "President Xi Jinping vows to punish, with an iron hand, any violators who destroy ecology or environment, with no exceptions." That night, the U.S. Embassy air monitor in Beijing rated the air "hazardous."


© 2015, The New York Times News Service

China Blocks Web Access to Documentary on Nation's Air Pollution
 
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I am not sure if india is doing any better than our communist neighbour in this regard having blocked the "supposedly" wicked and deliberately made anti indian documentary on a particular rape.

At least chinese do not claim to cherish the democratic rights like us:hitwall:.
 
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i have seen western media target China regarding pollution again and again.
 
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i have seen western media target China regarding pollution again and again.
This will begin soon with India also, just watch.

The Fog of War Over India’s Polluted Skies | Foreign Policy

U.S. missions in India, as of last fall, were already sharing air quality measurements in their local areas, just as they were in Beijing. Building on all this, when AirNow launches in India, it will make publicly available the levels of particulate matter that are 2.5 microns or less. Known as PM 2.5, these particles are the tiniest of airborne pollutants, and contribute to a range of diseases, including asthma and heart disease.

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Leading the charge among the international media is the New York Times, which reports frequently on the poor quality of Delhi’s air. Meanwhile, the Times of India, the largest circulation English-language daily in the country, launched a campaign called “Let Delhi Breathe” to raise awareness of the issue.

But just as in China, the public relations battle will be joined by those professing skepticism about the science of air pollution and by business and political interests for whom the primary concern is economic development, not the environment.

The fog of misinformation will be at least as thick as the pollution itself. As was once the case for much of China, residents of large Indian cities like Delhi and Mumbai are used to being told that poor visibility is due to “fog,” not airborne pollution. And there is already pushback from within India against the unfavorable publicity surrounding airborne pollution. Reacting to a World Health Organization report blasting the dire state of the air in India, a leading Indian atmospheric scientist claimed that Delhi is not, in fact, the most polluted city in the world. Instead, he suggested that the“hype” around the issue is a bigger problem than the quality of the air itself. But such perceptions may start to change if AirNow readings are widely publicized and shared on social media, as they were in China. That could spur the Indian government to action.
 
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The news is mostly bogus and taken out of its context. But the following is probably true although you may never trust the Western media:

Indians Find Ways to See Rape Documentary Despite Ban

China's war on pollution is voiced even at the highest level of the nation. And news on the fight against pollution can be seen/read on daily basis:

Controversial smog documentary wins praise - China.org.cn

President Xi to Give Iron Hand to Polluters -- Beijing Review

Extra efforts needed to battle smog: minister- China.org.cn

Expert: China may tackle smog within 10 years- China.org.cn
 
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Its always good to engage in introspective analysis , especially in regards to environmental policy.

It is a sign of maturity and progressive thought processes.
 
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Its always good to engage in introspective analysis , especially in regards to environmental policy.

It is a sign of maturity and progressive thought processes.


Mostly because the "documentary" used a lot of falsified data and narrative techniques to confuse the issue.

For example,

1. She went from smog directly to pm2.5, which is false because PM2.5 is in reality only a small fraction of the cause of smog. Smog's formation is much more complex, involving geographical, meteorological issues. Other pollutants such SO2 and CO2 contribute to the issue as well.

2. The claimed measurement data range can't possibility work because her equipment is actually identified to be incapable of operating in the time interval she claimed. Basically, she took a measurement from certain time of the day and assumed the rest of the day is the same.

3. The carbon density map is edited from the original data. The contrast is adjusted from the original to make the matter worse than it is.

4. Relationship between the charts, the charts show a death rate vs years and then jumps to assume that PM2.5 has a direct and strong correlation with the chart without evidence to prove it. Never-mind that death rate of a nation is influence by hundreds, if not thousands of different factors.

5. Presenting simulated data as real data. She also cut off vast majority of the developing countries from graph.

6. Directly falsifying data, let's not comment on her interpretation of vapor pressure and CO2 emission, which really should send her back to high school to learn the basics. She also managed to add to two zeroes to the vehicle traveled data for China. Nevermind the whole was an backward extrapolation using the current trend where anyone with a brain knows how much change China went through in the past few decades.

The list goes on. I have linked a site where the owner made a more thorough analysis.

《穹顶之下》数据造假汇总 - 乌有之乡网刊

Look, this isn't the first time an "environment group" with ulterior political motive presented a "documentary" with a lot of fake data and misdirected techniques. Heck, the Chinese are relatively new at this because we see it all the time in US. (and probably Europe as well)
 
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Sorry to say that, but India's air pollution is much more worse than China.

In China, only Heibei province and its nearby cities have bad air quality(due to heavy industries),

rest of China is still OK.

To improve the air quality in China is very easy, just produce less steel and cement, than air pollution will be reduced significantly.

Now, China produced 800 million tons steel and 2.5 billion tons of cement a year, cosumed 4 billion tons of coal a year.

If China reduced the production of steel and cement to Indian's level, the air quality problem is solved in China.


But I don't know How does India to improve their air quality, because India onlly proced 10% of China's steel and cement, yet, it still has one of worst air qualiy in the world.

I can't understand that
 
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Indians always find a problem in China to redeem themselves for devastating chaos of their own creation

images

Lacquer hardwood chest
There us a word for this. It's the same thing in the west where a black kid shoots his brother and the parents blame it on the white men for his son's action.
 
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木有ban啊,迅雷看看上有完整版呀。怎么这么扯淡
不过大多数网站都下线了是真滴,可能是时间点敏感?
 
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木有ban啊,迅雷看看上有完整版呀。怎么这么扯淡
不过大多数网站都下线了是真滴,可能是时间点敏感?

主要是数据造假造的太狠。虽然谁都知道环境很重要,但你既然把片子发出来,就不能信口开河。时间点其实并不敏感,减排和经济转型都讲了好几年了。
 
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