World | Xinhua Quake Moves Xinhua Past Propaganda Chinese news agency focuses coverage on victims, not government By Nick McMaster Posted May 13, 2008 7:01 PM CDT Copied A Chinese couple with their child inside a stadium, which was converted to a temporary shelter following Monday's powerful 7.9 magnitude earthquake in Mianyang, Sichuan province, China, Tuesday, May 13, 2008. (AP Photo) Xinhua, the Chinese state news agency, is better known for People’s Republic propaganda than hard-hitting journalism. But in the aftermath of the catastrophic Sichuan earthquake, the Wall Street Journal reports, the agency has published hundreds of up-to-the-minute accounts, many of them on the anguish of the victims and the grievances of provincial officials—a deviation from the usual focus on the government’s response. Part of Xinhua’s change may be competition from the Internet, which has allowed widespread access to competing reports of current events. Other Chinese journalists question the depth of Xinhua's evolution, but there’s no denying that aggressively covering natural disasters is risky: Perceived incompetence in Beijing's response can seriously damage the government's reputation. Read These Next Nancy Guthrie's camera footage raises an ancillary question: how? Trump no longer has to worry about Gallup approval polls. Elon Musk responds to the mass exodus at xAI. A federal judge backed Mark Kelly in his fight against Pete Hegseth. Report an error