Waterloo Region Record

Great Firewall of China gets a boost

Top theoretici­an calls for order on the internet

- Paul Mozur

WUZHEN, CHINA — Little heard from but hugely influentia­l, the professor-turned-Communist theoretici­an who has been a major adviser to three Chinese leaders finally stepped out of the shadows on Sunday.

Known as the brain behind President Xi Jinping, Wang Huning made his first major speech since joining the Politburo Standing Committee, the seven-member group that rules China, at a conference created to show off the country’s technologi­cal strengths to the world.

Well-known for his icy remove and support of authoritar­ianism, Wang called for security and order on the internet as part of five proposals he made to guide the future of cyberspace.

He also emphasized China’s technologi­cal prowess, and said more should be done by the government to guide the developmen­t of new industries like artificial intelligen­ce and quantum computing.

Wang stepped onto the world stage before an audience that included Tim Cook, the chief executive of Apple, along with an allstar cast of Chinese tech entreprene­urs, such as Jack Ma of Alibaba.

Wang, 62, had emerged as the ideologica­l counsellor to Chinese leaders and the wordsmith of Xi’s more authoritar­ian style before being tapped to join the Standing Committee at a Communist Party Congress in Beijing two months ago.

A close confidant of Xi and the two previous Chinese presidents, Wang was promoted despite never having governed a province or run a state ministry.

On Sunday, Wang praised China’s president for his “deep understand­ing” of internet governance.

He said the internatio­nal community had “warmly received” Xi’s ideas about the internet, including the concept of cybersover­eignty — a Chinese policy term used to argue that countries should be free to control the internet within their borders, even if it means censoring.

“Global cyberspace governance has no onlookers — we are all participan­ts,” he said, adding that “all parties” should have a say over how the internet is managed across the world.

The speech echoed arguments that Wang has made before.

In the 1990s, as a professor at Fudan University in Shanghai, he wrote that because China was so large and poor, it needed a stronger hand from the government to push through economic developmen­t.

He said that such authoritar­ian rule was necessary for China to restore its national greatness after what the Communist Party has often described as a century of humiliatio­n at the hands of foreign powers.

This has made Wang a longtime skeptic of calls for China to allow greater democracy despite his extensive experience abroad, including in the United States.

And while he has said he admires the strength of the United States, Wang has also been deeply wary of U.S. power.

His speech on Sunday showed how China’s vision of the internet attempts to wrestle with such tension. Chinese leaders have long lauded the economic power of the internet, while being deeply cautious about its democratiz­ing and internatio­nalizing influence.

In his speech, Wang highlighte­d China’s openness and the need for equal access to the internet. Yet China has led the way in cutting its internet off from the world with filters and blocks known as the Great Firewall of China.

It has also blocked internet access in areas where members of minority groups live, to limit the potential for unrest.

Such contradict­ions were evident at the World Internet Conference, which was dreamed up by Chinese officials who wanted to create a Davos-style conference for technology.

It has been held annually since 2014 in Wuzhen, an ancient canal town about 120 kilometres from Shanghai.

While many major foreign websites are blocked in China, the wireless connection­s at the conference allowed open access.

A promotiona­l video shown before Wang’s speech showed the web connecting China to the world, ignoring the existence of the Great Firewall.

 ?? NG HAN GUAN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Wang Huning, known as the brain behind the Chinese presidency, stepped out of the shadows on to the world stage Sunday.
NG HAN GUAN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Wang Huning, known as the brain behind the Chinese presidency, stepped out of the shadows on to the world stage Sunday.

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