DATELINE: HONG KONG
They are calling me a censor. I am not!
: Feng Xiliang, the South China Morning Post's new editorial
advisor.
Introduction: Mr. Feng is a journalist who has worked
at the most senior levels of mainland China's press. While he has
lived outside China for a number of years and is a well regarded
associate of Hawaii's East West Centre, his appointment at the
Post has stirred controversy among Hong Kong journalists
concerned about possible censorship. The interview with Mr Feng was
conducted by telephone in Hong Kong on 16.4.97.
Perhaps it was the
location of Mr. Feng's new office that started the rumours flying
around the venerable corridors of Hong Kong's leading English
language newspaper, the South China Morning Post. Not only the
journalists were curious to know who would occupy a room being
constructed next door to the English expatriate editor, Jonathan
Fenby.
Post employees learned with less than relish that the room was for
Feng Xiliang, one of mainland China's best known English language
journalists. Mr. Feng, 75, was to be employed as a consultant. A
founding editor of the official China Daily, he was known to
have excellent connections with China's ruling elite. Although he had
lived in the United States in recent years, he was still a member of
one of the most senior organs of the Beijing government, the Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference.
There was a time when the South China Morning Post was the
pillar of the British establishment in Hong Kong. But times have
changed as the Empire is eclipsed by Chinese economic power. Rupert
Murdoch divested himself of the information rich Post and its
Western intellectual baggage to concentrate on the entertainment
oriented Star [satellite] Television as it sought to harvest the
rapidly growing China advertising market. News man Murdoch sold out
to a Malaysian based Chinese businessman, Robert Kuok; a taipan said
to be the second biggest of all foreign investors in China.
But such investments can make media proprietors particularly
vulnerable to political pressure.Self made Hong Kong multi
millionaire, Jimmy Lai, was forced to divest himself of his shares in
the clothing chain he founded, Giordano, after his newspapers said
rude things about the Chinese Premier, Li Peng. Mr. Kuok would have
much more to lose than the comparatively diminutive Mr Lai, if one
his minor subsidiaries offended a Chinese government willing to wreak
commercial retaliation against foreign critics.
Fears that the Post subsequently went soft on China have
been difficult to substantiate. Nevertheless, by 1997, aides to the
outgoing Governor, Chris Patten, were claiming that the Post
had gone over to "the enemy camp". One aide quipped that the only
time that Patten had got a sympathetic press from the Post
this year was after some unknown person had tried to poison one
of his terriers. The dog survived. Soon afterwards, Patten was again
relegated to the back pages.
Enter Mr. Feng.
"I am working there as a consultant to strengthen links with
China. I act only as an advisor to give an opinion to the editor and
management," he said.
Would he be looking at articles written by Post journalists
before they were printed?
"I have no role in day to day things such as reporting. I am not
intending to comment on work unless I am asked to. I am going to be
more involved in setting up links."
Mr Feng's former colleagues spoke highly of him. He was genuinely
liked. A China scholar who met him in 1963, when Feng was an editor
of the Peking Review, described him thusly: "He was a very
dapper (the word fits very well) man of great charm who to my
youthful eyes appeared to be more of a language and journalism
[specialist] than hard-core agitprop type. He dressed as sharp as one
could get away with those days and had slicked-down hair and more
often than not the touch of a smile instead of the grim revolutionary
look. His English was excellent."
More recently, Mr Feng was described as a Chinese liberal who was
said to have become somewhat disillusioned after the Tiananmen Square
massacre. By that time, he had already attended a number of
journalism conferences at the American East West Centre and aquired a
taste for life in Hawaii. He left China to become a Mass Media Fellow
at the Centre in 1991. "He's one of the good guys," a former Centre
colleague said effusively.
But a liberal in China is something else again the West; in Mr
Feng's case a person who has served on the national propaganda
committee, a key part of the top communist party establishment which
enforces directives that Chinese journalists toe the party line. Even
in effective retirement, he was made a member of the People's
Consultative Committee, a repository for old and trusted senior
cadres.
When questioned about this, Mr Feng said his role at the
Consultatitve Committee would finish this year. He was distressed by
the negative reaction to his appointment at the Post.
"They are calling me a censor. I am not. I don't have the power.
It is in the hands of the editor and the proprietor to manage
editorial policy."
Mr. Feng had served as a editorial consultant in Hong Kong before.
He had worked for the pro-Beijing magazine, Windows, which
folded after its proprietor failed to become a contender for the
Chinese appointed postion of Special Adminstrative Region Chief
Executive.
"They don't need more people to strengthen their hands," Mr Feng
said of his new employers.
"I have no power. There's so much talk. I begin to wonder why I am
doing it," he said.
A former China Daily journalist thought he had the answer
to that question. Mr Feng would be able to provide invaluable
insights for the Post as it prepared to cover the forthcoming
People's Congress meeting.
Would this result in better coverage?
Not necessarily, he told me.
Would Mr Feng's appointment be a form of insurance for the
Post, I persisted.
More like a gamble, was the reply.
Alan Knight