Reuters: China eases Internet censorship during APEC talks
By Andrew Browne
Wednesday October 17, 2001 SHANGHAI, Oct 16 (Reuters) - China has lifted Internet blocks on
foreign
news organisations, including Reuters , CNN and the BBC, in a move that
coincides with a high-profile Asia Pacific meeting. Without any public announcement, Internet sites of news organisations
that
have been permanently blocked were accessible on Tuesday to Chinese
Internet
surfers. Reuters and the BBC are among media groups which have lobbied for their
sites to be unblocked, until now with no success. Also freely available was the Washington Post . It was not immediately clear whether the move represented a sudden
change in
policy, or was a temporary measure linked possibly to a meeting in
Shanghai
of the 21-member Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum, the
biggest
international gathering on Chinese soil in modern history. U.S. President George W. Bush was due in Shanghai on Thursday for an
APEC
leaders' meeting over the weekend. Several weeks ago, the Web site of the New York Times was unblocked,
with no
public explanation. It has not been clear which Chinese bureaucracies are responsible for
blocking, although it is widely thought that security agencies,
including
the State Security Bureau, are influential in making the decisions. The State Council Information Office has a mandate to regulate the
Internet. Western news organisations have long been puzzled by what appeared to
be
random censorship. Reuters news, for instance, has been widely
available on
sites such as Yahoo.com and the Web site of the International Herald
Tribune, which have not been blocked. But authorities have blocked the news section of the Yahoo! Asia site,
which
carries news from Agence France Presse. That site was also unblocked on
Tuesday.
MESSAGE OF OPENNESS More than 3,000 foreign journalists are due at the APEC meeting in
Shanghai.
China has laid on first-class facilities at a media centre and is
clearly
anxious to convey a message of openness to the world. The easing of censorship appeared to be limited to news organisations.
Other
sites remained blocked, including those promoting the banned Falun Gong
spiritual movement, including Clearwisdom.net. China regards the Falun Gong as a political threat to [party's name omitted]
rule
and has labelled the movement an [Jiang Zemin government''s slanderous term omitted] Although China is eager to embrace the Internet as part of its efforts
to
develop an information-based economy and promote e-commerce, it is wary
about the capacity of the Internet to undermine the state-controlled
media. Chinese authorities have insisted that state newspapers limit their
coverage
of the September 11 attacks on New York and Washington to dispatches
from
the state news agency, Xinhua. By strictly limiting the number of gateways to the World Wide Web,
Beijing
has found it relatively easy to apply blocks. China boasts more than 20 million Internet users and the number is
expected
to mushroom in coming years in line with booming sales of personal
computers.
http://sg.news.yahoo.com/011016/3/1kiwk.html
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