China has unveiled tighter Internet controls, legalising the
deletion of posts or pages which are deemed to contain
"illegal" information and requiring service providers to hand
over such information to the authorities for punishment.
The rules signal that the new leadership headed by Communist
Party chief Xi Jinping will continue muzzling the often
scathing, raucous online chatter in a country where the
Internet offers a rare opportunity for debate.
The new regulations, announced by the official Xinhua news
agency, also require Internet users to register with their
real names when signing up with network providers, though, in
reality, this already happens.
Chinese authorities and Internet companies such as Sina Corp
have long since closely monitored and censored what people
say online, but the government has now put measures such as
deleting posts into law.
"Service providers are required to instantly stop the
transmission of illegal information once it is spotted and
take relevant measures, including removing the information
and saving records, before reporting to supervisory
authorities," the rules state.
The restrictions follow a series of corruption scandals
amongst lower-level officials exposed by Internet users,
something the government has said it is trying to encourage.
Li Fei, deputy head of parliament's legislative affairs
committee, said the new rules did not mean people needed to
worry about being unable to report corruption online. But he
added a warning too.
"When people exercise their rights, including the right to
use the Internet, they must do so in accordance with the law
and constitution, and not harm the legal rights of the state,
society ... or other citizens," he told a news conference.
Chinese Internet users already cope with extensive censorship
measures, especially over politically sensitive topics like
human rights and elite politics, and popular foreign sites
Facebook, Twitter and Google-owned YouTube are blocked.
Earlier this year, the government began forcing users of
Sina's wildly successful Weibo microblogging platform to
register their real names.
The new rules were quickly condemned by some Weibo users.
"So now they are getting Weibo to help in keeping records and
reporting it to authorities. Is this the freedom of
expression we are promised in the constitution?" complained
one user.
"We should resolutely oppose such a covert means to interfere
with Internet freedom," wrote another.
The government says tighter monitoring of the Internet is
needed to prevent people making malicious and anonymous
accusations online, disseminating pornography and spreading
panic with unfounded rumours, pointing out that many other
countries already have such rules.
Despite periodic calls for political reform, the party has
shown no sign of loosening its grip on power and brooks no
dissent to its authority.
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