Foreign publications will be accessible to foreign participants at the
Olympic Games in 2008, when a ban on the printing of foreign newspapers and
magazines is temporarily lifted next year, Liu Binjie, minister of the General
Administration of Press and Publication, has said.
This is in accordance with the practice adopted by previous Olympics hosts
that overseas delegations and athletes can read newspapers from their home
countries, Liu said.
To achieve this, overseas publications will be printed in the country,
imported from abroad, or electronic versions will be accessible. Currently some
foreign publications, imported from overseas, are already available in hotels
and some other venues that foreign people often patronize.
"We will sum up the experience of the Olympic Games period and map out
measures to be taken in the future," Liu said in an interview on the sidelines
of the 17th National Congress of the Communist Party of China.
Liu said the country's laws ruled out foreign publications being directly
printed and distributed in China.
"This direction has been set," Liu said, adding some foreign publications in
special economic zones were going through procedures permitting them to be
published.
Some overseas publications are already widely circulated in China, in
cooperation with their domestic counterparts.
Liu said the country backs local newspapers, publishing groups and government
news websites to engage in domestic and overseas exchanges as part of broad
reforms of the previously State-sponsored industry.
The long-awaited listing of Liaoning Publishing Group, one of China's
largest, is expected to go ahead within two months, with 13 other publishing
groups preparing listings.
Liu said the publisher would now list all its operations, but soaring local
stock prices had prompted it to issue its shares domestically, rather than in
Hong Kong as originally planned.
Liu said authorities were also pushing for public share issues by government
news websites.
"By being listed they can raise capital and boost their strength, further
extending the reach of our propaganda policies," Liu said.
Liu said any newspaper that successfully reformed its corporate structure
could list in China or overseas.