South China Morning Post: Loosen Control Of Internet, Schroeder Urges Mainland
By Leu Siew Ying
December 4, 2003 China must free up the internet if it wants to achieve its goal of becoming
the world's biggest web market in four years' time, German Chancellor Gerhard
Schroeder said yesterday. "China will reach its ambitious aim . . . in four years only if the
internet is attractive in the same way for Chinese and foreigners," Mr
Schroeder said in a speech at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou. He did not directly refer to Beijing's strict controls on access to internet
content and the arrests of cyber-dissidents, but said China's goals can only be
achieved by ensuring freedom of access to the internet. "This requires
freedom for providers - I mean all providers," he said. "The higher the level of freedom for service providers and users, the
more dynamic will be the development of the internet." Last Friday, the authorities freed cyber-dissident Liu Di, a 23-year-old
former psychology student at Beijing Normal University, just before Mr Schroeder
arrived and ahead of Premier Wen Jiabao's visit to the United States. She was released on bail after one year under detention for writing political
satire about the Communist Party and posting messages on the Web calling for the
release of other online dissidents. Two other cyber-dissidents, Wu Yiran, 34, and Li Yibin, 29, were released the
same day but Du Daobin, a liberal thinker who had rallied support for Ms Liu's
release, remained under arrest. The government allows tens of millions of people to surf the Web while making
great efforts to try to control the views that they can express in their
postings, as well as limit or block their access to web sites deemed to have
sensitive content. Reporters Without Borders estimates that around 30,000 people are employed in
a "gigantic apparatus of monitoring and censorship". A month-long
investigation by the organization found that the authorities used a system of
filters to screen content on the Falun Gong, Taiwan moves toward independence,
June 4 - the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown - and human rights. Mr Schroeder said internet freedom was one of the main issues discussed at
the fourth Germany-China forum on rule of law last month which had information
technology as its theme. He also stressed Germany's one-China policy and expressed understanding for
China's position on the use of force if Taiwan declared independence, but said
he believed China was rational and would avoid attacking the island. Germany is Guangdong's biggest trade partner in Europe with bilateral trade
rising 32 per cent year on year to US$7.1 billion in the first 10 months of the
year, although total German investment in 148 projects is just US$560 million. http://www.asiamedia.ucla.edu/article.asp?parentid=5383
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