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Christian Science Monitor: China wrestles an online dragon China is shutting down Beijing's Internet cafes after a fire that killed 24 people earlier this week By Jasper Becker | Special to The Christian Science Monitor from the June 19, 2002 edition WORLD WIDE WAIT: A Chinese entrepreneur sits in his closed Internet cafe in
Beijing on Monday. The government cracked down on Internet cafes after a fire on Sunday. [REUTERS] BEIJING -- China's leaders are launching a nationwide crackdown on unregistered Internet cafes,
following a fire on Sunday that killed 24 people in Beijing. But as police move to shutter as many
as 2,400 cafes in the nation's capital, young Chinese are asking why the government fears the free
flow of information. "In China, there are so few sources of information for ordinary people. Why is the
government limiting the expansion of Internet bars? Do they want to block us from getting ahold of
knowledge?"' asks one Web user, signing on as "The Angry One." Just a week earlier, the People's Daily was boasting how China had surpassed Japan with an
Internet population of 56 million, second only to the United States, with its 156 million users. But
as the number of users in China has skyrocketed, so have the demands on regulating authorities. For
the past three years, [the] Party has been trying to find effective ways to monitor what people are
writing or reading without intimidating the youthful entrepreneurs who have started up China's more
than 200,000 cafes or 250,000 websites. An ongoing battle But the postfire crackdown is just the latest salvo in an ongoing struggle between the government
and the Internet. China shut 2,000 cafes and suspended another 6,000 last year. The businesses could
reopen only after proving that their policies were in line with those of the many state agencies
that regulate cyberspace. The regulations are prompted by the freedom -- and security -- of online information. Using the
cloak of anonymity provided by the Internet, youths have been logging on to criticize the
government's controls and question its motives. In response, the government has mounted a big
publicity campaign to justify its new controls, saying China's young people are becoming addicted to
"online heroin." Internet cafe owners, however, blame the fire on the government, which they say has driven them
underground -- and into unsafe conditions -- by overregulation. "My Internet bar opened half a year ago," says one owner. "I invested half a
million RMB [$60,000] in it, spent a lot money rewiring it and making a fire exit, but the process
to get the legal licenses was endless." He had to get permits from four separate ministries -- but he now faces indefinite closure. Most of the city's illegal Internet bars are typically frequented by students. Dingy, 24-hour
halls with blocked-up windows, they often have only a single exit to minimize detection by the
police. As a result, fires are often fatal -- but fire-safety standards are equally lax in other
privately run entertainment centers such as cinemas, video parlors, hotels, and discos. Although Sunday's terrible blaze gave Beijing's Mayor Liu Qi justification to launch the
crackdown to enforce proper safety regulations, the campaign comes hard on the heels of increasingly
desperate efforts to bring the new medium under tight control. 'Cleaning up' the Internet In April, the Ministry of Public Security held a conference on national surveillance which
decided to "clean up the Internet environment" before the 16th Party Congress this fall. China's security chiefs called for fresh efforts to detect suspects, especially "hostile
foreign forces" who allegedly threaten the country's information security and aim to
"subvert China through the Internet." [The] Party loves to import the latest technology as quickly as possible but has been
unpleasantly surprised by how dissident groups like the Falun Gong have used encrypted e-mails and
mobile phones to organize themselves into hard-to-break cells. In the pursuit of such dissidents, the government has slapped cafes with tough regulations. To
operate cafes, owners have to install monitoring software to enable police to track what websites
have been browsed on public computers. Owners of registered cafes report that the police come once
or twice a month to make checks. China's great firewall Internet cafes are also forbidden within 600 feet of primary and secondary schools, and
government, [the] Party, and military offices and installations. China originally tried to erect a firewall against the outside world and establish what was
really a giant, national Intranet -- a closed system with only tightly controlled gateways to the
outside world. When this seemed unachievable, it began hungrily importing software and high-capacity computers
to allow the state to monitor the huge flow of e-mails and the proliferation of websites. Two years ago, it introduced sweeping Internet regulations restricting foreign investment in
Internet content providers and requiring websites to maintain highly detailed records that must be
turned over to the police on demand. "We cannot neglect the influence of the Internet on teenagers' growth and social
development," information industry minister Wu Jichuan was quoted as saying at the time. Not only do Internet content providers have to register with the Chinese government, they must
keep detailed records of what they publish. Companies are also required to "record the times users log on to the Internet, users'
account numbers, Internet addresses or domain names and the phone numbers users dial in from." These records are to be maintained for 60 days and are to be turned over to the government upon
request. The new regulations effectively limit what content can be made available to the public. Beijing also bans any content that "harms the reputation of China," or that could be
classified as "disrupting social stability." The regulations prohibit content that is
"harmful to ethnic unity" and that will hurt the country's efforts to assert sovereignty
over Taiwan. In practice, the Ministry of Security has found it hard to track down dissent through the cyber
cafes. Even if a digital trail from an illegal message leads to a computer, the venues hook up
numerous computers to the same Internet connection and a single IP address. Copyright © 2002 The Christian Science Monitor. All rights reserved. http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/0619/p06s01-woap.html Posting date: 6/20/2002
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