Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Tabloid |
Owner(s) | Nanfang Media Group |
Editor | Liu Chen |
Founded | 1997 |
Political alignment | Liberal |
Language | Chinese (Simplified) |
Headquarters | Guangzhou, China |
Circulation | 1,690,000 (March 2012) |
ISSN | 1004-5171 |
OCLC number | 144518464 |
Website | www |
Southern Metropolis Daily (SMD) is a for-profit tabloid newspaper located in Guangzhou city, China,[1] and its circulation is throughout the greater Guangdong and Pearl River Delta region.[1] SMD is a constituent of the Nanfang Media Group, which is under the supervision of the Guangdong committee of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). The newspaper publishes daily, with 72 pages and multiple sections relating to consumer products, international affairs, sports, and other topics of the public interest.[2]
SMD is best known for its investigative reporting. SMD has been involved in multiple scandals and controversies. Its best-known controversy is the publishing of the 'Sun Zhigang incident'[3] which resulted in the repeal of the force repatriation law.[3] This publishing also resulted in the imprisonment and torture of SMD journalists Cheng Yizhong, Li Minying, and Yu Huafeng.[2]
SMD's motto is "writing for the people."[2] in 2005, Cheng Yizhong was the laureate of the UNESCO/Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize for his resistance to Chinese censorship laws and police corruption.[4][5]
History
Origins
Southern Metropolis Daily (SMD) was first created in 1995. It is located in the Guangzhou City of the greater Guangdong and Pearl River Delta area. It was first established as a weekly newspaper under the name Southern weekly.[5] It was created as a constituent branch of the Nanfang media group, all of which are a part of the Southern Media Group. The name Southern Metropolis was extended to Southern Metropolis Daily in 1997 by The Nanfang Media Group, by which it was also established as a tabloid media form.[5] SMD competes with other daily newspapers in the Guangdong region; including but not limited to Information Times, Southern Weekly, Yangcheng Evening News and Guangzhou Daily. The SMD headquarters was created in 1997, located in Guangzhou China which is where it still resides. SMD is written in simplified Mandarin SMD has a circulation of 1.845 million people.[6] SMD is a public media production company. It is ranked first amongst all local newspapers in the city of Guangzhou.[7]
The Renovation and transition from Southern Weekly to Southern Metropolis Daily
In 1995, SMD a weekly newspaper at the time under the name ‘Southern Weekly’ was failing to profit off its weekly publications. This was because all newspapers at the time were mouthpieces for government statements and because government party officials began to limit the public funding to regional newspapers.[8] The Nanfang Media Group attempted to revive the newspaper however it failed due to limited private funding from advertisers and investors.[8] It was then decided by Nanfang Media Group to discontinue ‘Southern Weekly’ and create a new tabloid daily newspaper, the ‘Southern Metropolis Daily. During this first renovation, SMD comprised 16 pages and employed 200 people in various sections within the newspaper.[9] In 1998, SMD changed its tabloid to feature a yellow and red colours masthead on the front page.[10] In the same year, SMD became the first and only daily tabloid to feature news regarding international relations and policy on its front page.[10] SMD also created ‘consumer sections’, each daily edition would feature different consumer products.[11][12] For example, automobile sales would be featured on Monday, and real estate agencies would advertise new property listings within the daily edition on Thursdays.[12][13] In December 1999, the circulation of SMD was recorded at 600000. Renovations continued with the lengthening of length from 16 pages in 1995 to 72 pages by 2000. In 2000, over 2000 people were employed at SMD with an average age of 27 years old.[14]
Pricing history
Between the years 1997 and 2007 SMD editions were priced at 0.5 yuan(approximately 0.10AUD). This was the market standard price for all daily tabloids in the Guangdong and Pearl River Delta area. SMD was the first public newspaper in the province to increase its price to 1 yuan in early 2007. In early November 2007, SMD increased its price of the daily edition to 2 yuan, a 200% increase. Its yearly subscription package increased from 360 yuan to 720 yuan making it officially the most expensive daily newspaper tabloid in the Guangdong region.[5]
Organisation
News staff
SMD reports on local, national, and international issues of public interest related to China. The newspaper has national correspondents throughout China, including Shenzhen, Zhuhai and Xi'an. SMD also has international correspondents in London and Cardiff. SMD As of 2020, SMD employs between 4600 and 5000 employees. SMD has a median employee tenure of 1.8 years and has experienced an 8% growth of employees between November 2020 and April 2021.[15]
Content
Editorial stance
SMD is a market-based newspaper outlet that aims to create profit. It is a for-profit newspaper with a liberal political alignment. SMD is known for its "Practise of western journalistic norms."[16] SMD focuses on reporting local events such as the Wenchuan earthquake and the Shanxi mining deaths. SMD provides statistical evidence and opinion-based journalism in its reports.[17] SMD engages with the local public by issuing surveys and conducting street interviews with citizens in order to provide multiple perspectives on reportings.[18]
Structure
SMD provides a daily publication 365 days of the year, this publication is between 70 and 90 pages. Every Saturday, SMD publishes an "in depth weekly review" which is an investigative edition of the publication and reviews events covered in daily editions throughout that week.[6] Of the front page of the newspaper, 30% consists of the masthead and Southern Metropolis Daily banner, whilst 70% is an image or series of images with text. SMD comprises six sections within its daily publication. These include feature article, cultural section, political section, economic section, investigative section history section, consumer section, international section.[19]
Style
SMD is known for its colourful photographs and its populist style of writing, often breaching censorship laws in order to portray an uncensored depiction to the public.[2] SMD has an investigative style, often incorporating interviews with victims of crimes, police officials and people related to matters of the public interest.[2] SMD's motto is "writing for the people".[2]
Criticisms and controversies
Dismissals and public resignations
Employee dismissals in the SMD often occur due to journalist/editor writing styles which do not align with SMD's editorial stance. This is due to strict censorship laws in China. These laws prohibit the publication of viewpoints which are considered "slanderous" to the Chinese government.[20]
On 27 December 2005, Xia Yitao, who was a chief editor for SMD, was completely dismissed from his role. This was due to the front cover article from 26 December which depicted a Guangdong province politician Xu Shaohua having been punished by the Chinese government for a mining accident.[21] In January 2004, SMD deputy chief editor Li Minying and General Manager Yu Huafeng were forced to resign by state officials after being arrested and detained by the Chinese police due to a breach of Chinese censorship laws; having had reported on the alleged police torture of Sun Zhigang.[2] In 2004, Political reform activist and SMD journalist Cheng Yizhong as well as SMD marketing managers Yu Haifeng and Lin Minying were prosecuted by Chinese police on behalf of the China Securities Regulatory Commission for the alleged embezzlement of public funds which were meant to supplement a SMD restructure.[21] In 2010, the director of the SMD column of Chinese history, Zhu Di, published an article entitled "Patriotism does not mean love for the Royal Court." This led to his dismissal in April 2010 due to a breach of the copyright laws in China as it allegedly breached censorship laws in China.[22] On 29 March 2016 an experienced editor and journalist of SMD publicly resigned from the newspaper stating that he could not work under the government censorship laws.[23] On 16 December 2008, deputy chief editor of SMD Jiang Yiping was demoted from his position to a junior journalist role for unspecified reasons.[21]
Climate change
Between 2005 and 2015, SMD published 251 articles which investigated and reported on China's contribution to climate change in the 21st century.[24] These publications alleged that China was the world's largest contributor to climate change and pollution-related deaths based on 81 countries. China government officials forced the SMD to remove these publications as they were seen as defamatory to the Chinese government. The Chinese government claimed that these publications lacked scientific evidence to support the claims made. This resulted in public backlash from non-government organisations in China, as well as western countries such as The United States of America.[25] These campaigns called for the abolishment of government intervention in public media outlets such as the SMD.
The Sun Zhigang incident
On 20 March 2003, The Sun Zhigang incident occurred. On 21 March, SMD published an article within the investigative section of SMD on the incident.[26] SMD reported that Sun Zhigang was killed due to the "forced repatriation law" which SMD stated allowed police to use "extreme" force in order to detain and imprison a person who cannot provide proof of a legal occupation permit in China.[27] SMD's article led to public backlash throughout Asia and in Western countries as well. This backlash led to the repeal of the "forced repatriation law" in China on 2 April 2003.[28]
SARS epidemic scandal
During the SARS epidemic outbreak between 2002 and 2004, the Chinese government called for a National People's Congress session in March 2002.[12][29] During this congress session, the Chinese government strictly prohibited the publication of statements within media outlets that did not coincide with the message that the Chinese government was in control of SARS disease.[2] Southern Metropolis Daily was ordered to present a false account of SARS statistics including; an understatement of SARS cases in the Guangdong region and an overstatement of doctors and SARS clinics in this area.[2] On 20 March 2003 SMD published this false information in the form of a government statement in their daily edition as per the censorship laws in China.[2][30] SMD editors Cheng Yizhong, Yu Haifeng, and Lin Minying were opposed to this publication.[12] In response, on 4 April 2003, these editors quoted the deputy minister of Health Gao Qiang who allegedly stated that the SARS epidemic was out of control throughout China and included this statement in the daily edition of SMD.[12] In response, Zang Dejiang who was the part chief of Guangdong at the time ordered Cheng, YU, and Lin to report to him in Guangzhou City.[12] This resulted in a verbal warning on behalf of the Chinese Government.[2]
The Clinton-Lewinski publication
In 1998, Southern Metropolis Daily received an international fax from an SMD international Correspondent in Indiana which detailed the Clinton-Lewinski scandal.[2] Of the four Guangdong newspapers that reported on the scandal, SMD was the most popular, selling over one million editions of its January 22 edition, 1998.[31] The SMD chief editor and journalist Cheng Yizhong decided to approve a 10-page excerpt regarding the scandal.[32] This resulted in backlash from Chinese government censors.[32] It is alleged by Cheng Yizhong that on 24 January in 1998, Cheng received a phone call by an unnamed government censor[2] who referred to 22 January publish as “vulgar”[2] and made an informal threat that there would be “severe punishment”[2] if censorship laws continued to be breached by SMD publications.[2]
The arrest, imprisonment, and torture of Cheng Yizhong, Yu Haifeng, and Li Minyu
Following the SMD reporting on the ‘Sun Zhigang Incident' and subsequent repeal of the ‘forced repatriation law’, SMD were under strict surveillance from government officials and Guangdong province media censors.[13] Cheng Yizhong alleges that the government advised advertisers to cease interaction with the newspaper,[13] as well as government officials such as police officers who were ordered not to engage in interviews or make statements to SMD.[13] In November of 2003, The Chinese Government launched an official investigation on SMD, specifically the reporters who were involved with the ‘Sun Zhigang Incident’ report; Cheng Yizhong, Yu Haifeng, and Li Minyu.[13][33] On the 27th of November, Guangdong province police raided SMD headquarters and seized all tax forms and expense reports. On December 2nd, at approximately 11 AM,[33] Yu Haifeng was arrested in the breakroom of SMD publishing headquarters pending an investigation of fraud and treason against the Chinese government.[33][14] This investigation continued into the first two weeks of January and the second arrest occurred on 6 January 2004,[14] Li Mingyu was arrested on suspicion of Fraud and Treason as well.[14] On the 8th of January, Cheng received a phone call from an anonymous police whistleblower who allegedly informed Cheng that Yu had been severely tortured by officials,[34] and as a result, attempted suicide unsuccessfully.[34][2] In 2008, Cheng told author Philip Pan “The pain was like a knife twisting in my heart. It was guilt and outrage at the same time. And it intensified my hatred of the system.”[2]
On 18 March, Cheng was forced to demote himself from the editor in chief of SMD.[2] On 22 March 2004, Yu Haifeng was convicted of Fraud and treason in the Supreme People's Court in Beijing[2] and sentenced to a minimum of twelve years in a Liangxiang prison in Tianjin Municipality district.[2][35] On the same day, Li Mingyu was convicted of the same offense and received an eleven-year prison sentence in Yanqing prison in Yanqing District.[35][14] On 23 March 2004, officers of the Chinese Federal Police arrested Cheng in his apartment in Guangzhou City.[34] He was arrested for allegedly accepting illegal payments to report on the Sun Zhigang incident.[34] He was detained at Panyu Prison in Guangzhou pending trial.[34][2] Cheng reported receiving severe psychological abuse in the form of mocking and unlawful solitary confinement periods with no sunlight in his cell.[36] While Cheng was awaiting a pending trial, SMD launched multiple campaigns advocating for his freedom and launched a petition in April which was signed by major Newspaper outlets such as China Daily.[36] In late April, mass awareness had been spread and fourteen former and current provincial party chiefs demanded a review of the evidence against Cheng, Yu and Li.[36][14] This review of Evidence resulted in a re-trial in the Supreme People's Court in Fuyang court and on 6 August a decision from the 10th National People's Congress and its president judge Xiao Yang found Cheng innocent of all crimes.[14] Li's sentence was reduced to five months ‘time served’ and was released on the 18 August.[37] Yu's sentence was reduced to four years including ‘time served’,[37] he was released in late 2009.[37]
Awards and achievements
SMD coverage of the FIFA World Cup in 1998
Between 10 June and 12 July during the FIFA world cup of 1998, SMD broke a national record as the longest coverage of a sports event in history.[2] SMD achieved this through a consecutive forty-three-day coverage of the world cup.[2] This assisted SMD in establishing themselves as a dominant newspaper in the Guangdong Region as China's football followers were amongst the largest in the world at the time.[2]
References
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- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 Pan, Philip P. (17 June 2008). Out of Mao's Shadow: The Struggle for the Soul of a New China. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1-4165-7989-2.
- 1 2 Liebman, Benjamin L. (2005). "Watchdog or Demagogue? The Media in the Chinese Legal System". Columbia Law Review. 105 (1): 1–157. ISSN 0010-1958. JSTOR 4099306.
- ↑ "Chinese Journalist Cheng Yizhong Awarded UNESCO/Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize". Congressional-Executive Commission On China. 13 April 2005. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
- 1 2 3 4 Wang, Xiaotong. "The Comparison Between Newspapers In Hong Kong And Mainland And Its Enlightenment – A Case Study On Apple Daily And Southern Metropolis Daily". 2012 Second International Conference On Business Computing And Global Informatization. 2012.
- 1 2 Wang, Haiyan, Colin Sparks, and Yu Huang. 2018. "Measuring Differences In The Chinese Press: A Study Of People's Daily And Southern Metropolitan Daily". Global Media And China 3 (3): 125-140. doi:10.1177/2059436418806022.
- ↑ "Innovation Stands Out In Newspaper Rankings". 2021. Chinadaily.Com.Cn.
- 1 2 Short, Philip, Mao: A Life, Henry Holt & Co., 2000.
- ↑ Schoenhals, Michael, Doing Things with Words in Chinese Politics: Five Studies, RoutledgeCurzon, 1995.
- 1 2 Wu Guoguang, Zhang Weiguo, and Bao Pu, eds., Ziyang qiangu—Zhao Ziyang jinian wenji (Zhao Lives: A Collection of Commemorative Essays), Pacific Century Press, 2005.
- ↑ Wu Guoguang, Zhang Weiguo, and Bao Pu, eds., Ziyang qiangu—Zhao Ziyang jinian wenji (Zhao Lives: A Collection of Commemorative Essays), Pacific Century Press, 2005
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- 1 2 3 4 5 Zhang Yan and Fang Ke, “Is History Repeating Itself? From Urban Renewal in the United States to Inner-City Redevelopment in China,” Journal of Planning Education and Research 23, no. 3, 2004, pp. 286–98.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Pils, Eva, “Asking the Tiger for His Skin: Rights Activism in China,” Fordham International Law Journal 30, April 2007, pp. 1209–87.
- ↑ Veg, Sebastian. Minjian: The Rise of China's Grassroots Intellectuals. New York; Chichester, West Sussex: Columbia University Press, 2019. Accessed April 23, 2021. doi:10.7312/veg-19140.
- ↑ Esarey, Ashley. "Cornering the Market: State Strategies for Controlling China's Commercial Media" Asian Perspective 29, no. 4 (2005): 37-83. Accessed April 23, 2021.
- ↑ Lei, Ya-Wen. "Freeing The Press: How Field Environment Explains Critical News Reporting In China". American Journal Of Sociology 122 (1): 2016. 1-48. doi:10.1086/686697.
- ↑ Lee, Francis L. F. "Poll Reporting And Journalistic Paradigm: A Study Of Popularity Poll Coverage In Hong Kong Newspapers". Asian Journal Of Communication 16 (2):2006. 132-151. doi:10.1080/01292980600638629.
- ↑ Baohui, Xie. "Media Transparency In China: A Critique Of The Party-State Rhetoric And Market Discourses". The University Of Adelaide 1 (1): 178-185. 2012.
- ↑ Jiang, Ying. "Chinese Anger at the Label of Censorship" in Cyber-Nationalism in China: Challenging Western Media Portrayals of Internet Censorship in China, 63-76. South Australia: University of Adelaide Press, 2012. Accessed April 23, 2021.
- 1 2 3 Tong, Jingrong (20 January 2011). Investigative Journalism in China: Journalism, Power, and Society. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN 978-1-4411-3923-8.
- ↑ Chua, Emily. "Rethinking the Chinese Popular: Commercial and Technological Change in the News Media after Mao" Berkeley Journal of Sociology 56 (2012): 48-72. Accessed April 23, 2021.
- ↑ "China editor resigns over media censorship". BBC News. 29 March 2016. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
- ↑ Han, Jingjing, Shaojing Sun, and Yanqin Lu. "Framing Climate Change: A Content Analysis Of Chinese Mainstream Newspapers From 2005 To 2015" .2017.. International Journal Of Communication 11 (1).
- ↑ Wang, Qianrong. "More Room For Climate Change News Reporting In China? A Study Of Climate Change Coverage In Southern Metropolis Daily", 2020. 12-18.
- ↑ Balme, Stéphanie, and Michael W Dowdle. Building Constitutionalism In China. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. 2009.
- ↑ Zhu, Yuchao. "Proclamation, Implementation, and Abolishment of China's Custody & Repatriation Law—An Institutionalist Analysis" American Journal of Chinese Studies 13, no. 2 (2006): 187-208. Accessed April 23, 2021.
- ↑ TONG, JINGRONG. "Press Self-censorship in China: A Case Study in the Transformation of Discourse." Discourse & Society 20, no. 5 (2009): 593-612. Accessed May 24, 2021. http://www.jstor.org/stable/42889285.
- ↑ Wu Xiaoling, SARS, published in Caijing, May 6, 2003.
- ↑ Alison Mack., Stacey Knobler., Katherine Oberholtzer., Laura Sivitz., Stanley Lemon., and Adel Mahmou. Learning From SARS: Preparing For The Next Disease Outbreak : Workshop Summary. National Academies Press. 2004.
- ↑ "Reuters Archive Licensing. 2021".
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- 1 2 3 Zhang Yan and Fang Ke, “Politics of Housing Redevelopment in China: The Rise and Fall of the Ju’er Hutong Project in Inner-City Beijing,” Journal of Housing and Built Environment 18, 2003, pp. 75–87.
- 1 2 3 4 5 White, Tyrene, China's Longest Campaign: Birth Planning in the People's Republic, 1949–2005, Cornell University Press, 2006.
- 1 2 Greenhalgh, Susan and Edwin A. Winckler, Governing China's Population: From Leninist to Neoliberal Biopolitics, Stanford University Press, 2005.
- 1 2 3 Cho, Young Nam (2004). "Political Reform Without Substantial Change: An Assessment on the Hu-Wen Leadership in China". Asian Perspective. 28 (3): 61–86. ISSN 0258-9184. JSTOR 42704467.
- 1 2 3 Chiang, Sing-chen Lydia (2007). "Daoist Transcendence and Tang Literati Identities in "Records of Mysterious Anomalies" by Niu Sengru (780-848)". Chinese Literature: Essays, Articles, Reviews. 29: 1–21. ISSN 0161-9705. JSTOR 25478395.