“Witnesses voiced concern that the state of Canadian Mandarin and Cantonese language media is being compromised by the PRC [People’s Republic of China],” the Commons Special Committee on Canada-China Relations wrote in a report last May 17. “Their concerns were primarily based on China’s acquisitions of Chinese Canadian traditional media and the use of China-controlled social media applications to spread disinformation.”
To address these concerns, MPs on the committee proposed recommendations in the report. This includes identifying the ownership and activities of media organizations linked to the Chinese regime in Canada, with a focus on misinformation campaigns, censorship, and intimidation. They have also called for measures to minimize or eliminate the presence of Chinese state-controlled social media in Canada, identifying and addressing misinformation and censorship on applications like WeChat and TikTok.
The CACN report also recommended the Heritage Minister direct the CRTC to “a new broadcasting policy of general application that authoritarian state-controlled broadcasters not be on the List of non-Canadian programming services and stations authorized for distribution.” Cabinet did not comment on the recommendation, according to Blacklock’s.
No specific date has been set for the hearing.