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所跟贴 晓刚老弟,您看俺应当相信您的报道呢,还是民主国家主流媒体的报道呢? -- 随便 - (0 Byte) 2003-10-28 周二, 下午1:18 (236 reads)
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文章标题: 随网的意思是澳洲的The Age, Telegragh 等等都不是民主国家主流媒体? (326 reads)      时间: 2003-10-28 周二, 下午3:04

作者:Anonymous罕见奇谈 发贴, 来自 http://www.hjclub.org

随网的意思是澳洲的The Age, The Australian, The Telegragh, The Sydney Morning Herald 等等都不是民主国家主流媒体?





The Age: Government admits to pressure over Hu speech



【The federal government said today it bowed to Chinese pressure to prevent Green protests against President Hu Jintao because the stakes were so high.

Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said the implications for Australia's relations with China could have been very serious if Mr Hu had faced similar parliamentary protests to President George W Bush】



【Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing spoke to Speaker Neil Andrew on Thursday night demanding assurances that Mr Hu would not face similar protests.

He's understood to have warned that Mr Hu would cancel his speech without guarantees that he would be heard respectfully.

Mr Andrew ordered three guests of the Greens, a pro-democracy activist and two Tibetans, be moved from an open public gallery to a glassed-in area usually reserved for school groups.】



【He also summoned Michael Organ, the Greens' only lower house MP who hadn't taken part in the anti-Bush heckling and would be in the chamber to hear Mr Hu.

Mr Organ told AAP today that Mr Andrew told him he was under a lot of pressure from the Chinese who did not want him wearing an arm band or displaying a Tibetan flag.

"I replied that I will wear what I will," Mr Organ said.

He wore an armband and a large Tibetan flag badge. He sat silently through the speech and stayed seated during the standing ovation.】



【Mr Downer and leader of government business in the House of Representatives Tony Abbott made it clear they regarded the consequences of embarrassing Mr Hu very seriously.

Asked on the Nine Network if the government let foreign governments decide who goes into Australia's parliament, Mr Abbott replied: "No we don't, except on this particular occasion it was important for Australia to put its best face forward to the world and to the president of China】



【Mr Downer told ABC television he didn't know how close Mr Hu came to cancelling his speech.

"Obviously they were very preoccupied with what Brown and Nettle had done the previous day," he said.

"This had shaken the Chinese, there's no question of that.

"If the speeches had been the other way around, if President Hu's speech had come before a democratic leader like President Bush's and there had been the sort of Greens protest during President Hu's speech, the implications for our relationship with China could have been very serious." 】



【Senator Brown told AAP he would raise the issue with the Senate privileges committee.

He would demand to know why the party's guests were excluded from the usual galleries, why Senator Nettle was manhandled by an attendant, why government members tried to stop the Greens getting close to Mr Bush when he was mingling after his speech and why the two senators were suspended without a division.

Mr Organ said he would raise some of the same issues in the house.

Senator Brown said the episode showed the government thought trade was more important than democracy or human rights.

"Democracy has given way to dictatorship," he said. 】





The Australian: The speech that nearly wasn't

【Just before 9.30am yesterday, the Foreign Minister of China, Li Zhaoxing, pulled up at Parliament House in his chauffeur-driven limousine.

He headed straight for the office of Neil Andrew, the Speaker of the House of Representatives.】



【Hu was due to address the parliament at 10am. But there was a hitch.

Hu was concerned the Greens would repeat Thursday's dramatic interruption of George W.Bush's speech. The Chinese had carefully scrutinised the list of "guests" invited by each member and senator and noted the names of several dissidents including Chin Jin, chairman of the Federation for a Democratic China.

While the US President had dismissed the Greens' protest as proof of a vibrant democracy, the Chinese were not as charitable.

According to well-placed sources, the English-speaking Li signalled that Hu would not proceed with his parliamentary address unless assurances could be given that it would not be disrupted.】



【The Chinese, so successful at suppressing freedom of speech in their homeland, had convinced the Australian parliament to do the same.

The several hundred guests who were being ushered to their seats - plus most of the 200-plus MPs and senators who had been transported back to Canberra for the visits of Bush and Hu - were mostly unaware of the high-stakes diplomatic game taking place behind closed doors.

Neither did Chin, nor the the local Tibetans until they tried to enter the public galleries. 】





CNN: Bush heckled in Canberra speech



【As Bush began to talk about the downfall of Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq, two separate interjections by Australian Greens Party senators, Bob Brown and Kerry Nettle, forced the U.S. president to halt his address.



The Speaker of the House ordered that the parliamentarians be removed from the house by the Sergeant at Arms but both resisted efforts to have them removed.



Senator Brown called out that President Bush should show respect for the world's laws and said that Australia was not a "sheriff" in Asia.



During the second interjection by Senator Nettle, Bush quipped: "I love free speech". 】



作者:Anonymous罕见奇谈 发贴, 来自 http://www.hjclub.org
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