Canadian PM bans Chinese media from Arctic trip | Inquirer News

Canadian PM bans Chinese media from Arctic trip

/ 11:02 AM August 23, 2014

In this Friday, Aug. 23, 2013 photo, Li Xue Jiang, of the People’s Daily, China’s largest newspaper, is hauled to the back of the room by Royal Canadian Mounted Police, as Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper answers questions while visiting Xstrata Nickel’s Raglan Mine in the northern Nunavik region of Quebec. AP

TORONTO  — Canada has banned journalists with China’s official news agency and the Communist Party newspaper from joining Prime Minister Stephen Harper on an Arctic trip. Chinese reporters claimed they’re being discriminated against.

Jason MacDonald, chief Harper spokesman, said in an email Friday from the Arctic that “some media outlets are not welcome on the trip” when asked if reporters for the People’s Daily and the Xinhua News Agency had been banned.

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The decision follows Li Xuejiang of the People’s Daily having pushed former Harper spokeswoman Julie Vaux during last year’s trip to the Arctic after she prevented him from asking a question.

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In a telephone interview, Li acknowledged pushing Vaux but said the prime minister’s office discriminated against Chinese journalists by not allowing him to ask a question and later having him manhandled by police.

“They used the police force to get me out of the line of the journalists. It’s very rare in the world,” he said. “They made bruise on my arm.”

Li, the bureau chief for the Communist Party newspaper and a former Washington correspondent, said he couldn’t understand why he was silenced. Harper’s staff limits the number of questions at public events.

Li said he didn’t’ even apply to go on this year’s trip.

“Why do they discriminate against Chinese journalists? For racial reasons?” he said. “They didn’t give me any reason.”

Xinhua News Agency reporter Baodong Li said he applied but was told he could not go because of a lack of space. He doesn’t understand why he was banned.

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“This is really ridiculous. This is not just against Mr. Li of the People’s Daily, it’s also against all the Chinese journalists,” Baodong said. “It has nothing to do with me.”

Li and Baodong said they are considering issuing a complaint with the Ottawa press gallery.

The ban comes at a time of strained relations between Canada and China. The Canadian government recently accused Chinese hackers of infiltrating the computer systems of Canada’s top research and development organization. China denied it. Just a few days later, Chinese authorities arrested a Canadian couple in China on suspicion of stealing state secrets about military and national defense research. They remain detained.

David Mulroney, Canada’s ambassador to China from 2009 to 2012, said journalists in China can be quite aggressive, and have been for some time.

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“I was once in a melee as they stampeded into a meeting room to get a photo of then-president Jiang Zemin. I believe that journalism is one of those critical aspects of Chinese society that is changing slowly but steadily,” Mulroney said in an email.

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