Washington Post: China Restores Web Censorship
By Clay Chandler Monday, October 22, 2001 SHANGHAI, Oct. 22--Hours after a high-profile meeting of Pacific Rim
leaders
in Shanghai, China's rulers quietly restored long-standing blocks on
the Web
sites of foreign news organizations including the CNN, the BBC, Reuters
and
The Washington Post. The government lifted the blocks Thursday without explanation ahead of
last
weekend's summit of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum. During
the
two-day conference--the largest gathering of foreign leaders on Chinese
soil
since the [party's name omitted] Party swept to power in 1949--China's leaders went
to
extraordinary lengths to demonstrate that they run a modern,
cosmopolitan
nation ready to play a leading role in global affairs. Meetings were staged in gleaming conference centers bristling with
sophisticated telecommunications technology. Chinese President Jiang
Zemin
flaunted his English skills before the international press. But by Monday morning, with President Bush and guests from the other
Pacific
Rim economies safely on their way, government Net nannies pulled the
plug. China's Ministry of State Security, the agency thought to enforce the
Web
ban, had no comment.
China's leaders have offered little explanation for their restrictions
on
foreign news Web sites. Asked in a meeting with foreign journalists
months
ago why China wasn't as willing to let its readers view Western sites,
Shanghai Mayor Xu Kuangdi dismissed the question as irrelevant on the
grounds that few Westerners could read Chinese. In fact, the government's censorship policies are arbitrary and
inconsistent. The government blocks direct access to The Washington
Post's
Web site. But it has so far left mostly unmolested IHT.com, the Web
site
operated by The International Herald Tribune, The Washington Post Co.'s
joint venture with The New York Times Co., and MSNBC.com. Both sites
carry a
variety of articles published in The Post, including many stories about
China. Similarly, Yahoo.com isn't completely blocked, although it provides
access
to a host of articles from Reuters and the Associated Press. Nor is the
site
of The South China Morning Post, Hong Kong's leading English daily,
even
though its reporters regularly probe sensitive China issues such as
human
rights, corruption and Taiwan relations. The Web site of the New York Times was unblocked several weeks ago with
no
explanation after a meeting between Jiang and senior Times executives.
The
government also allows direct access to the Web site of the Wall Street
Journal, perhaps because full access to that site requires payment via
an
overseas computer, putting it off-limits to all but a handful of
Chinese
citizens. Western news sites can be reached by determined Internet users
sophisticated
enough to connect through third-party servers known as proxies. But the
government's Net police are apparently engaged in a constant battle to
search out and block the most popular proxy sites. Jiang and other top [party's name omitted] Party officials delight in boasting about
the
rapid rise in number of Internet users in China--at last count there
were
about 20 million. Sales of personal computers are booming here. China's
leaders have often stressed the importance of keeping up with the
United
States, Europe and Japan in developing electronic commerce and other
Internet technologies. Here in Shanghai, city officials are investing
heavily to spread a vast broad-band network to bring ordinary users
high-speed access to the Internet. For the moment, though, the movement of traffic along China's
information
superhighway is slowed by official checkpoints every few feet. In most
major
cities, for example, Internet cafes are forced to install monitoring
software that tattles on users attempting to connect to politically
sensitive or pornographic sites. In theory, operators of China's major Internet portals are legally
obligated
to turn over names and records of any customers using their sites for
purposes the government regulators deem subversive. In practice, that
forces
the companies to employ small armies of monitors to coordinate with
regulators and security police and handle the delicate task of
self-censorship. During the summit, the government's willingness to loosen its grip on
the
Internet and other media only went so far. Overseas Web sites operated
by
members of Falun Gong, which China has branded an [Jiang Zemin government's slanderous term omitted], remained
inaccessible. Similarly, Chinese domestic television coverage of Jiang's news
conference
with President Bush did not air live and was heavily edited. Unlike
President Clinton, Bush did not demand that his appearance here with
Jiang
be carried live.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A33409-2001Oct22.html
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