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Censored in Beijing: a correspondent watches himself fade to black

The Monitor's Peter Ford knows censorship happens all the time on his China beat. But when it happened to him in an interview with CNN, he felt punched in the gut.

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CNN
The Monitor's Peter Ford on CNN, just moments before the program he was appearing on 鈥 about China's censorship 鈥 was itself censored.

It鈥檚 not as if I鈥檝e been physically assaulted, I grant you. But I certainly feel violated 鈥 that nauseous sensation when you realize your home has been burgled.

I鈥檝e been censored.

One moment , a guest of CNN鈥檚 鈥淥n China鈥 talk show discussing press freedom in China, and the next I wasn鈥檛. The screen went black. The Chinese censors had pulled the plug. Where there was light, they brought darkness. Nobody in mainland China could watch the program.

鈥淲ell of course,鈥 you will say. 鈥淵ou are in China. What do you expect? The freedom to talk publicly about the lack of freedom?鈥

And, of course, I know perfectly well that almost all of my Chinese colleagues are censored, or forced to self-censor, every day.

But this was my first time. And the first time is different.

As well as my day job being 海角大神鈥檚 correspondent in China, I am also president of the Foreign Correspondents鈥 Club of China. That means people come to me when they want to know about foreign correspondents鈥 working conditions in China.

Those conditions have been getting worse in recent years. The Chinese government has even been denying journalist visas to reporters from newspapers it particularly dislikes, such as The New York Times.

So when CNN鈥檚 Kristie Lu Stout invited me onto her monthly talk show, along with another Beijing-based foreign correspondent and a Hong Kong journalism professor, I had plenty to say.

We taped the show in Hong Kong last month. But when it went out聽on Wednesday聽night, I had answered only one question by the time 鈥 four minutes into the conversation 鈥 the screen suddenly went black.

What did the Chinese censors think they were doing (aside from providing more grist to critics鈥 mills)? CNN is not generally available to Chinese homes; you have to have a satellite dish that only luxury hotels and special residential compounds for foreigners are allowed to install.

By killing the transmission, the authorities denied only a tiny, overwhelmingly foreign audience the chance to see the show. And it was hardly the stuff of which revolutions are made 鈥 three middle-aged intellectuals discussing the mechanics of censorship.

But even that, it seems, unnerves the Chinese government so badly that it did not dare let any of its citizens watch us. The censors had to stamp us out.

When I think about it,聽that聽is what made me feel sick: the authorities鈥 blunt declaration, with the flick of a switch, that I did not exist. It is an unsettling sensation.

But I do exist, and so do my colleagues. And here is a link to the discussion that the Chinese government does not want you to hear.

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