A Chinese government-backed think tank has accused the US and
other Western governments of using social-networking sites
such as Facebook to spur political unrest and called for
stepped-up scrutiny of the wildly popular sites.
As China's online population - the world's largest - surges
past the 400 million mark, its Communist government is
growing increasingly sensitive to any online threats to its
authority.
Although Beijing operates an extensive system of monitoring
and censorship to block material deemed subversive, the
internet is still the most open and lively forum for
discussion in a society where traditional media are
controlled by the state.
Twitter, for instance, has emerged as a gathering place for
dissidents and other politically minded Chinese wanting to
voice their complaints and share information.
Though the government routinely bans sites like Facebook,
Twitter and YouTube, technologically savvy users can easily
jump China's "Great Firewall" with proxy servers or other
alternatives.
According to a report released this week by the Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences, the sites also harbor an external
threat.
Social-networking sites threaten state security because the
US and other Western countries are using them to foment
instability, said the report, titled "Development of China's
New Media."
"We must pay attention to the potential risks and threats to
state security as the popularity of social-networking sites
continues to grow," the report said. "We must immediately
step up supervision of social-networking sites."
It cited unnamed US officials as saying that social
networking is an "invaluable tool" for overthrowing foreign
governments.
A comment by US Defence Secretary Robert Gates that new
communication technology is a "huge strategic asset" was also
given as an example of the US threat.
The report noted how Facebook and other social-networking
sites were used as tools of "political subversion" in the
mass protests following the Iranian elections last year.
They also played a role in the violence in China's
far-western region of Xinjiang last summer that left some 200
people dead, the report said, noting some online groups
overseas had issued calls for independence for the
traditionally Muslim area.
A spokesman for the US Embassy in Beijing declined to comment
on the specifics of the report because he had not seen it,
but said the US viewed freedom of expression as a "universal
human right."
"For us, it's an issue of internet freedom and we're strongly
committed to internet freedom and oppose all forms of
censorship," spokesman Richard Buangan said.
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