Pubdate: Mon, 19 Jun 2000 Source: South China Morning Post (Hong Kong) Copyright: 2000 South China Morning Post Publishers Limited. Section: Notes On China Contact: http://www.scmp.com/ Author: Tom Mitchell in Guangzhou MAINLAND NOT IMMUNE TO PRESS POWER Last week the Yangcheng Evening News ran a series of investigative reports "uncovering" rampant prostitution and drug-dealing at small hostels near the Guangzhou railway station, which is the target of a major clean-up operation launched in May. In as much as it is difficult to uncover something that everybody knows about, the fanfare with which the News surrounded its reports was overblown. The fact that some small hostels in and around Sanyuanli, an area just north of the railway station, harbour prostitutes, drug-dealers and drug-users is an open secret in Guangzhou. But the reports nevertheless reveal much about how Guangzhou newspapers can exert pressure on government officials - and increase newspaper sales. On June 12 the News splashed across its front page photos of four heroin addicts shooting up, drug dealers conducting transactions and prostitutes soliciting passersby. The next day it published a gratuitous picture of a young woman covered in blood. She had been attacked and robbed at a hostel. The stories accompanying the photos were written by a team of journalists who spent a week living undercover in the hostels. They discovered small stores that doubled as man-traps. The old women running the stores spent most of their time on the lookout for clients, who they brought to prostitutes holed up in nearby hostels. Three such stores were found on Kangying Avenue, which, ironically, translates as "Resist the English" Street and is a patriotic landmark. It is the site of one of the few Opium War skirmishes that the Chinese won. One prostitute, 21, said business was good, thanks mainly to the ticket touts and drug pushers who work the railway station. "They eat the railway station and we eat them," she said. Heroin was available for anywhere between 50 and 400 yuan (HK$47-376) per gram, depending on the quality. "You can buy it on the streets in broad daylight," an addict noted. "It's not as furtive a thing as everybody thinks it is." The reports sent government officials scurrying. Guangzhou party secretary Huang Huahua deplored the situation and said the Government had to act. Guangzhou's police chief, Zhu Huisheng, paid a personal visit to the newspaper's headquarters on June 13 to express his concern and to thank the reporters. Officials in Baiyun district, where the hostels investigated by the News are located, held a three-hour emergency meeting just hours after the first reports appeared. They sent 1,400 police to sweep hostels in the district, netting more than 200 suspected criminals. The News then increased the pressure by establishing special hotlines for readers to call to air their views on the subject. In five hours it fielded more than 1,000 calls. With public opinion running so strongly in its favour, the newspaper aimed higher. On June 15 its lead article alleged that some public security officers provided a "protective umbrella" for criminal elements, citing specific instances where rogue police in Baiyun district had abused their powers. Thus in the space of four days the Yangcheng Evening News progressed from running common-knowledge reports to challenging Guangzhou's public security organs, and in the process it sold many copies. On June 13 the paper, which hits the streets late in the afternoon, was sold out by 5pm. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson