2021年5月31日星期一

Chinese people’s open letter to the World Health Organization



Respected World Health Organization:

In the past year, the terrible COVID-19 pandemic has ravaged the world. It made thousands of millions of people infected with the deadly virus, and claimed the lives of millions of people. Therefore, addressing ways to prevent the next pandemic is one of the key agendas of the ongoing 74th World Health Assembly.

We, as Chinese people, also care profoundly about this issue. This is not only because China was the first country that detected the pandemic and warned the world of the coming plague, but also because we Chinese people were the first to experience the dreadfulness of the pandemic and the misery of losing lives.




We believe that in order to prevent the next pandemic, labs that research dangerous viruses and even bio-weapons should be given particular attention at the WHA. Among them, the US Army’s Fort Detrick lab worries us the most. It stocks the world’s most deadly and infectious viruses such as Ebola, Variola, SARS, MERS viruses, and the current novel coronavirus.

The Fort Detrick lab has worrying safety records. For instance, in the fall of 2019 before the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, various Western media reported that the lab was abruptly shut down following serious safety violations, in particular relating to the leak of viruses. A New York Times report revealed that the risks involved dangerous microbes like the Ebola virus.

However, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has refused to disclose the truth behind the shutdown due to “national security” excuses. The US media did not follow up what happened at Fort Detrick, but instead has attributed the pandemic to China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology.


To our dismay, although the origins of the Ebola virus and novel coronavirus remain unclear, on the internet speculations that the two viruses came from this US army bioweapon lab are running high. Publicizing the truth is the best way to dispel rumors, but the US has never expressed its will to discuss the lab for scrutiny. Meanwhile, China has received the virus origin probe led by WHO experts.

The US cover-up behavior and its attempt to divert attention, as well as the worrying safety record in the Fort Detrick lab, all concern we Chinese people.

Life is the most precious. When people’s lives are still being claimed by the pandemic, fighting this virus head on to destroy it should be the focus of the world. Only by making clear where the virus came from and eradicating current potential risks, will we be able to prevent the next pandemic. This will protect the human rights of more people from being eroded. This needs the common will of humanity.

Therefore, we have decided to launch this joint signature campaign and call on the WHA to demand that the US open up its Fort Detrick lab so that global scientists, including those from China, can investigate.

Kind regards

2021年5月25日星期二

Epoch Times, NTD... Des sites complotistes pilotés par une «secte» chinoise ultraconservatrice

 


Dans les derniers jours, un média français a dénoncé une diffusion de contenus complotistes et ultraconservateurs sur les sites d'Epoch Times et NTD en France. Selon un article publié par Le Parisien le 25 avril 2021, des « médias » émanant du mouvement Falun Gong publient des contenus destinés aux anti-vaccins, aux covidosceptiques et à l'extrême droite complotiste. De plus, le journal a mené une enquête sur le mouvement sectaire Falun Gong qui se cache derrière ces sites de propagande, dont les points essentiels sont listés ci-dessous.

Les « médias » Epoch Times et New Tang Dynasty (NTD) ont été respectivement créés en 2000 et en 2007 par le mouvement Falun Gong qui est par nature, un mouvement sectaire. Il prône une croyance apocalyptique dans sa doctrine, et une pratique de méditation basée sur les techniques et les exercices traditionnels chinois. Mais, selon un spécialiste de l'histoire de la Chine, cette pratique est associée à une cosmologie religieuse ou une divinité qui tourne autour de la vision du maître Li Hongzhi.

Avec l'apparition d'Epoch Times et de New Tang Dynasty, le mouvement a procédé à une large campagne de propagande contre le gouvernement chinois. La plupart des bénévoles de ces médias sont des pratiquants du Falun Gong, des aspirants journalistes sont également recrutés, et ils travaillent tous avec un rythme de travail épuisant, pour capter au maximum l'attention publique sur Internet.

Le mouvement présente également des affinités avec l'extrême droite. Aux États-Unis, où Epoch Times se veut la référence médiatique pour l'alt-right américaine, il a vanté les mérites de Donald Trump et relayé des théories complotistes, investissant 1,5 million de dollars en publicités pro-Trump su Facebook en six mois, selon la chaîne NBC. En Allemagne, a montré une étude de l'Institute for Strategic Dialogue, il se fait le relais du parti extrémiste AFD. Et en France, sur Facebook et sur Youtube, sa page compte des millions d'abonnés, invitant des figures de l'extrême droite française.

Plusieurs chaînes francophones sur YouTube qui ont une possible affiliation avec Epoch Times et NTD diffusent sans cesse des contenus très à droite, pro-Trump, anti-Chine, qui nient la défaite de Donald Trump et accusent la Chine d'être à l'origine du covid-19, toutes aux valeurs très conservatrices.

Pourtant en France, les participants du mouvement se font discrets dans les médias. Les rédacteurs et les présentateurs refusent de répondre aux questions de leurs confrères français. Bruyants sur Internet, les recettes publicitaires de toutes les publications représentent une partie importante de leur financement. La propagande contre le gouvernement chinois sur le Covid-19 est devenue, après l'élection de Donald Trump, la nouvelle poule aux œufs d'or de leurs chaînes. À l'aube d'une nouvelle campagne présidentielle en France, la présence des médias liés au mouvement Falun Gong inquiète les médias français.



Après avoir gagné le public américain en soutenant Donald Trump, ces « médias» émanant du mouvement spirituel Falun Gong s’imposent désormais en France, en publiant des contenus destinés aux anti-vaccins, aux covidosceptiques et à l’extrême droite complotiste.

AbonnésCet article est réservé aux abonnés.

Le 25 avril 2021 à 15h47

Et si Joe Biden avait dérobé des millions de voix lors de l’élection présidentielle américaine ? Et si le virus du Covid-19 avait été créé par le Parti communiste chinois ? Et si Donald Trump était la victime d’un complot géant orchestré par Barack Obama ? Pour les médias Epoch Times et NTD, du groupe Epoch Media, ces théories ne sont pas des questions farfelues mais des faits, inscrits dans la « vérité » et la « tradition ».

Ces plateformes, éditées dans une trentaine de pays et 22 langues, ne ressemblent pas tout à fait aux médias dits « mainstream ». Leur créneau ? Diffuser, via des multiples canaux sur les réseaux sociaux, ainsi que des plateformes plus officieuses, de nombreuses fausses informations, allant de faits non contextualisés pour mieux capter un public extrémiste, aux théories les plus farfelues, versant dans le complotisme.


2021年5月8日星期六

Fox News:The Epoch Times congressional press credentials revoked

Fox News reported on April 28 that the Epoch Times reporter has been expelled from the US Capitol press corps and his credentials have been revoked. The White House has refused to allow the Epoch Times to participate in the story

A screenshot of the FOXNews.com report


On April 27, Tucker Carlson, anchor of Fox News, interviewed Josh Philipp, host of "Crossroads" in the Epoch Times. Phillip said the Epoch Times was disqualified from the House press gallery.


Mr. Phillips complained that, in a recent interview, the Chinese news agency Xinhua and the People's Daily could cover the White House and the Senate hearings, while The Epoch Times could not.



The Epoch Times, New Tang Dynasty Television and Voice of Hope International Radio are Falun Gong media.


Philipp said, you have state run Chinese media being allowed to cover the White House, being allowed to cover Senate hearings, while "The Epoch Times" is not.


2021年5月7日星期五

The Guardian:The Epoch Times push fake news about Democrats and Chinese communists

 


Falun Gong-aligned media push fake news about Democrats and Chinese communists

The Epoch Times, believed to be linked to the Chinese religious movement, is part of an anti-CCP influence operation tapping into the US right, according to a media watchdog

— The Guardian (@guardian) April 30, 2021


US news outlets aligned with Falun Gong, a religious movement locked in a decades-long conflict with the Chinese state, have been increasingly successful in promoting conspiracy narratives about Democrats, election fraud and communists to the pro-Trump right in America.

Experts say that in a future post-pandemic landscape, the cable news channel NTD, and especially the multimedia enterprise the Epoch Times, may amplify the efforts of Republicans to link Joe Biden and Democrats to the Chinese Communist party (CCP), and to harden US public opinion against China.



Far-right supporters move to open source to evade censorship

Read more


According to Angelo Carusone, president and CEO of the media watchdog Media Matters for America, these outlets, and especially the Epoch Times, were always critical of China, and somewhat right-leaning, but were not commonly counted as problematic during the 2016 election as spreading falsehoods across social media platforms like Facebook.

But in a telephone conversation, Carusone said Epoch Times pivoted hard from 2017 towards material which stoked conspiracy narratives, and began spending freely in order to make sure that their message was prominent on platforms like YouTube.

“After social media sites moved against the fake news outlets, it left a gap,” Carusone said. “What Epoch Times did so well was to step right into that gap.” And, he says, they secured their niche by handing money to big tech platforms.

After Epoch Times spent about $11m on Facebook ads in 2019, the platform banned them from advertising on the grounds that they had violated rules around transparency in political advertising. But the outlet simply took its business elsewhere: according to data from Pathmatics that was analyzed by Media Matters

In the year to date, Epoch Times has spent an estimated $930,000 in digital advertising promoting videos and desktop display ads. Over 95% of their spending was on YouTube.

Through 2020 and into the early life of the Biden administration, Epoch Times and NTD alike promoted conspiracy theories related to the QAnon movement, the supposedly compromising international ties of Hunter Biden, and even sold merchandise outlining half-forgotten conspiracy theories such as “Uranium One”, which held that Hillary Clinton, as US secretary of state, engineered the sale of uranium deposits to Russian interests in return for donations to the Clinton Foundation.

While US rightwing outlets like One America News and Newsmax have profited by supplying the seemingly bottomless appetite among the rightwing grassroots for material that depicts American politics as a tangle of elite conspiracies, Carusone says it is a mistake to view the Falung Gong-aligned outlets as normal media companies.

The principal goal of Epoch Times – now publishing in 36 countries under the supervision of a network of non-profits – is not to generate profit, he says, but to mount a long and broad “influence operation”. And the goal of that influence operation, in turn, is “to foment anti-CCP sentiment”.

By leveraging the deep partisan polarization in US politics, and by tapping into a long tradition of anticommunism on the American right, according to Carusone, the outlets have sought to link Biden and the Democratic party to radical leftist movements like antifa, and then publish “anything that ties them to CCP influence”, however spurious.

He envisages the possibility that Republicans will cooperate with these outlets – who have also spread significant amounts of disinformation about the Covid-19 pandemic – to ask “what is Joe Biden going to do about China causing coronavirus?”

Although there is no evidence of direct cooperation, they have already shown a willingness to echo anti-China messaging with the likes of the former Trump aide Steve Bannon and billionaire Chinese exile Guo Wengui, also known as Miles Kwok, who has financed Bannon’s activities through consulting contracts and donations.


Steve Bannon and Guo Wengui (also known as Miles Kwok) appear at a news conference in New York in 2018.Photograph: Carlo Allegri/Reuters

From as early as January 2020, Bannon and Kwok were attempting to spread a narrative alleging that the pandemic was caused by a Chinese bioweapon, both on Bannon’s radio program and on their shared media venture, G News. The Epoch Times followed that April with a documentary that repeated the bioweapon claims, and have taken further opportunities to allege, without basis, that China’s government started the pandemic deliberately.

According to Carusone, such opportunistic retreading of existing conspiracy narratives is characteristic of these outlets. “They’re not drivers, they’re not weaving new conspiracy theories, they’re amplifying what’s already out there,” he said.

This effort appears to be increasingly well-resourced. Although the financial arrangements of the many Epoch Times non-profits vary, the original Epoch Times Association Inc, headquartered in New York City, saw revenues and donations increase sharply every year between 2016 and 2019 according to IRS 990 declarations inspected by the Guardian. While in 2016, the association took in $3.9m in revenue, in 2019 they brought in $15.4m, and cleared $1.86m after salaries and expenses.

Neither outlet has ever explicitly confirmed its links to Falun Gong, a religious organization which emerged from the so-called “qijong” movement, which teaches adherents to practice breathing, movement and meditation exercises. But former employees reportedly say that they are run by movement adherents, and that Falun Gong founder and leader, Li Hongzhi, and others in the movement’s hierarchy exercise a powerful influence over the outlets’ anti-China messaging.

Alongside the English language outlets, Chinese language outlets and a dance troupe spread the group’s messages.

Though Falun Gong emerged in China in the 1990s, its founder now lives in the US.

The Epoch Times, which began as a print newspaper in 2000, has been a steadfast opponent of the CCP, which has persecuted Falun Gong and other, related qijong movement groups since the late 1990s.

The newspaper was founded in Georgia by a Chinese-American Falun Gong adherent, John Tang, and a group of like-minded businessmen. Over the next half-decade it expanded internationally.

Carusone says that the intensification of conspiracy messaging in the output of NTD and the Epoch Times, along with their embrace of Trumpism could make them more influential as the far right regroups in the coming months and heads towards the 2022 midterm elections.

“There’s an incredible demand for a version of the world centered on one big villain.” he said. “Epoch Times provides that very simple narrative.”

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/30/falun-gong-media-epoch-times-democrats-chinese-communists?utm_term=Autofeed&CMP=twt_gu&utm_medium&utm_source=Twitter#Echobox=1619771174

What’s that? A look at the Epoch Times billboards popping up across Michigan

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