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Friday, 06 February 2026



Journalists as well as generals have been purged – only Xi is safe in China today


Purges have defined Xi Jinping’s leadership from the start. Just before he came to power, he moved against his then biggest rival Bo Xilai. It was a scandal that rocked China, and indeed the world (Bo was linked to murdered British businessman Neil Heywood). Years later we still don’t know fully what happened to Heywood, Bo or his wife Gu Kailai – obfuscation being a key characteristic of the Chinese state – but the episode certainly set the stage. Once in power, Xi launched his so-called anti-corruption campaign, which sought to crackdown on “tigers” and “flies” – powerful leaders and lowly bureaucrats. Thousands of officials have since been jailed and millions more punished. And at the end of January, Xi took out two more “tigers” – top military brass Zhang Youxia, and an associate, Liu Zhenli. Both have been accused of “grave violations”.


There’s of course nothing wrong with stamping out corruption if and when it exists and if done with due process. It’s just that a genuine desire to rid the country of double-dealings rings hollow in Xi’s China, as Sunday’s arrests of two journalists remind us. On 1 February, Liu Hu and Wu Yingjiao were detained. Two days earlier they’d published an article on Hu’s public WeChat account alleging corruption by Sichuan’s county party secretary. The article is now offline. The pair have been accused of “making false accusations” and conducting “illegal business operations”.  


This is not Liu’s first encounter with the Chinese authorities. A well-known investigative journalist, who cut his teeth in state media before turning online for his investigations, he was detained for nearly a year in 2013 after he finger-pointed at the former deputy mayor of Chongqing. Wu is younger, less high-profile, though he has been nominated for multiple journalism awards. They’re the kind of journalists that would be exalted in ordinary circumstances, except China is no ordinary place. It holds the global title of number one jailer of journalists of any country and goes big on publicising the cases of some to scare others. The repeated arrests of citizen journalist Zhang Zhan and the five-year sentencing of Sophia Huang Xueqin (a former Index award-winner) are two examples. Even a quirk – the fact that local TV in China is often full of stories exposing government corruption – serves a purpose. As the scholar Dan Chen outlined in the pages of Index, it’s a cunning way to entrench power.


Chen also said this: “Televised criticism of local officials contrasts with the taboo on criticism of central government officials, agencies and policies – a taboo that is enforced by brutal suppression.” It’s a useful yardstick when trying to make sense of what’s happening right now. Essentially Wu and Liu flew too close to the sun, and for totally different reasons so too did the military men. The best way to stay out of trouble in China is to not align with, or investigate, those at the top. Only Xi is safe. Everyone else is cannon fodder.  


Jemimah Steinfeld

CEO, Index on Censorship


In case you missed it


Police clash with protesters in Turin after squatters evicted

Demonstrators clashed with police this week in the Northern Italian city of Turin during protests in support of a squatted community centre that was shut down by authorities in December.


Two journalists from RAI TV were attacked by some of the masked protesters while covering the demonstration, made up of an estimated 15,000 people. More than 100 people were injured and at least three arrested. The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is calling for the Italian government to investigate the attacks thoroughly.


On 5 February the right-wing Meloni government passed a decree providing police with new powers allowing them to detain suspected protesters before demonstrations can begin. Police can use the controversial law to temporarily hold troublemakers to prevent them from spreading unrest. Watch some videos from the demonstration against the eviction here and here.


Namibian police threaten journalist for asking President a question

Namibian president Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah had senior journalist Jemima Beukes escorted out of a Cabinet meeting on 2 February after Beukes asked a question despite being told by the president she could not.


Beukes is the founder of independent news website The Whistle, which describes itself as “focused on public-interest journalism and political analysis in Namibia and Southern Africa”.


After being kicked out of the meeting, officers threatened Beukes with arrest before photographing her car. You can watch the video of the president defending her decision here.

Venezuela releases detained journalist

The government of Venezuela has released 22 prisoners including journalist Rory Branker, reports Reuters.


Branker, a journalist for news website La Patilla, was detained in February last year and faced up to 30 years in prison on charges including treason, with his family unable to locate him for over 200 days. This is not the first time La Patilla staff have been targeted, with journalist Ana Carolina Guaita facing the same treatment in 2024.


The release is part of a programme announced by the interim government of Delcy Rodríguez. Human rights organisation Foro Penal says that 383 political prisoners have been freed since 8 January 2026.

Flashback

Photo by: (People walk past images showing Chinese President Xi Jinping) Lou-Foto/Alamy; (Nabakyala Elizabeth mwana wa Windsor/ Commonstealthiness) Eria Nsubuga