Southern Weekly, founded in 1984, has its head office in Guangzhou, with news bureaus in Beijing, Shanghai and
Chengdu. The paper is published by the Nanfang Daily Group under the
Guangdong Provincial Committee of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). It is printed simultaneously in many Chinese cities, and distributed across
mainland China.
Southern Weekly currently operates upon 8 key sections: News, Defense, Current Political Situation, Economy, Environment, Culture, Supplement, and Comment, together with an editorial guideline of "Justice, Conscience, Love, Rationality". Circulation is more than 1.6 million copies, on average, which is said to be the biggest weekly circulation of any newspaper on the Chinese mainland. Thus it is considered to be one of the most influential media outlets in China. As of 2007 it had the highest circulation in Beijing.
The New York Times has described the
Southern Weekly as "China's most influential liberal newspaper". Outlets such as
BBC and
n+1 have termed the newspaper as one of the country's most respected. When U.S. President Obama visited China in 2009, he turned down an interview with
China Central Television, and instead accepted to talk to
Southern Weekly. The interview later turned out to be pale and avoided controversial topics, which was interpreted as the result of authorities' pressure. After
Obama then issued a letter to the newspaper praising its commitment to press freedom, the paper was forced to omit it in its report due to government censors.
Southern Weekly protested by featuring two large blank spaces on its first two pages. Meanwhile, being a commercial spin-off of
Nanfang Daily in Guangdong Province,
Southern Weekly also attracts audiences with entertainment, consumer-oriented lifestyle and sports coverage. In January 2013, the provincial propaganda authorities forced
Southern Weekly to run a provided commentary glorifying the CCP in place of the paper's annual new year editorial, which had been a call for proper implementation of the country's constitution. Journalists working at the newspaper publicly objected to this interference – which is an unusual occurrence in China – via
Sina Weibo. The CCP's
censorship order was believed to have come from provincial propaganda chief
Tuo Zhen, a former vice-president of state-run
Xinhua News Agency. On 7 January 2013, protesters gathered outside the newspaper's headquarters to support journalists on strike due to censorship, among them, Bill Chou. == Notable reports ==