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- PRESS, Page 64Thrust onto Center StageReporters in Beijing scramble to cover a confusing drama
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- CNN Tokyo bureau chief John Lewis and his four-member crew
- arrived at Beijing's Tiananmen Square to spend another night
- covering the standoff between Chinese demonstrators and government
- troops. Decked out in ponchos and straw hats to protect themselves
- against the rain, the crew surveyed the scene as tens of thousands
- of protesters continued to defy the martial-law edict ordering them
- to disperse. Exhausted after working two straight days with little
- or no sleep, Lewis and his colleagues curled up on the square's wet
- pavement and went to sleep. At sunrise, as Lewis awoke, he found
- dozens of amused Chinese demonstrators taking pictures of him.
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- For the U.S. journalists who have spent the past three weeks
- covering the historic protest in Tiananmen Square, the mixture of
- curiosity, awe and fascination was mutual. "Long ago, when I
- dreamed of being a reporter," said CBS EVENING NEWS anchor Dan
- Rather last week, "this is the sort of story I dreamed of
- covering." Aside from its inherent drama, the China story is
- special because it has thrust the journalists themselves onto
- center stage. Aware that the eyes of the world were upon them, the
- students played to the TV cameras to voice their demands for
- freedom and democracy. Like the demonstrators, reporters have been
- operating under the constant threat of a crackdown. Meanwhile, the
- shifting working conditions imposed on them by the government
- became a weather vane of the power struggle going on behind the
- scenes.
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- First came the May 20 declaration of martial law, which
- restricted journalists from conducting interviews or taking
- photographs. It soon became apparent, however, that the rules were
- hardly being enforced. The Voice of America's Mandarin news
- broadcasts, the most credible source of information in the eyes of
- the demonstrators, were reportedly jammed, but only on some
- frequencies. Live TV transmissions by satellite were suspended and
- restored, then suspended again. As the possibility of live coverage
- came and went, videotaped reports flowed freely out of the country
- to satellite stations in Tokyo, Hong Kong and even Moscow. Entry
- into China proved surprisingly easy as journalistic reinforcements
- poured into Beijing from around the world. One 747 arriving late
- last week carried only 50 passengers, 40 of whom were newspeople.
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- By the time the latecomers arrived, the story was in a holding
- pattern. The previous week's images of hundreds of thousands of
- Tiananmen demonstrators were no longer news. "The China story is
- beginning to elude us," said ABC's Ted Koppel in one of last week's
- most honest appraisals. "There appears to be a struggle for power
- at the highest level of government in China, but we cannot see it
- or measure it or describe it in any detail."
-
- To fill the gap, CBS tried to recapture some of the drama of
- the preceding week. When China Central Television announced that
- it would be shutting off its satellite-transmission facility on
- Wednesday, CBS booked the last block of time, hoping to recreate
- a scene similar to the one a few days earlier, when viewers saw
- Chinese officials ordering Rather off the air. Sure enough, that
- night's CBS EVENING NEWS showed Rather at his anchor desk in New
- York City, interviewing Beijing correspondent John Sheahan. When
- Sheahan's picture suddenly disappeared from the screen, Rather
- abruptly cut him off in midsentence, even though Sheahan's
- telephone connection remained intact. "We timed it so that if (the
- satellite) did get cut, it would happen during the report,"
- admitted producer Lane Venardos.
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- With the importance of images fading, temporarily at least,
- there was little in the way of solid analysis. After declaring
- martial law on nationwide TV, Premier Li Peng was not seen in
- public for five days; Deng Xiaoping and party leader Zhao Ziyang,
- the other key players in the power struggle, remained out of sight
- even longer. During this period of uncertainty, solid information
- was the scarcest of commodities in China, and wild rumors abounded.
- There were even reports that Deng was fleeing into retirement in
- the U.S. Protesters in Shanghai, Xian and Lanzhou staged memorial
- services for Beijing hunger strikers, although none had died.
- "People are learning about major government changes and about the
- biggest student movement in China's history from Popsicle sellers
- and newspaper dealers," said Zhang Weiguo, a reporter on Shanghai's
- World Economic Herald. "This is not a way to inform the people."