Global Times

China extends rule of law on Internet

Cyber management needed to fight crime

- By Zhao Yusha

China has accelerate­d the developmen­t of cyber laws since the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC), by actively engaging the government, Internet service providers and netizens in creating a clean cyber environmen­t, observers said.

This year’s China Cybersecur­ity Week begins on Saturday in Shanghai, with Liu Yunshan, a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee, invited to speak at its opening ceremony.

Liu, also deputy head of the central Internet security and informatio­n leading group, stressed the need to better manage the Internet and fight cyber crimes, the Xinhua News Agency reported.

Any person or organizati­on should follow the law and respect others’ rights on the Internet, the Cyberspace Administra­tion of China (CAC), also known as the Office of the Central Leading Group for Cyberspace Affairs, said on Sunday.

The CAC added that cyberspace is not outlaw territory, that it’s also covered by laws.

from an hour to 30 minutes between the dual-use civil and military airport and Tibet’s second-largest city, the Tibet Financial Daily reported Sunday.

The new road runs parallel with the XigazeLhas­a railway and links the city’s ring roads with the 5,476-kilometer G318 highway from Shanghai to Zhangmu on the Nepal border. As part of G318, the highway connects the border town of Zhangmu with Lhasa, the capital city of southwest China’s Tibet Autonomous Region. It can link with the future cross-border Sino-Nepali railway, said Zhao Gancheng, director of the Center for Asia-Pacific Studies at the Shanghai Institute for Internatio­nal Studies.

The Sino-Nepali railway was part of a deal struck by Nepal Deputy Prime Minister Krishna Bahadur Mahara when he visited China in early September. The railway includes two lines: one connecting three of Nepal’s most important cities and two crossing the border between China and Nepal, the People’s Daily reported.

The Sino-Nepali railway, which passes through the Chinese border town of Zhangmu and connects with routes in Nepal, will be the first railway by which China enters South Asia, Zhao said. “Although the railway connection between China and Nepal is intended to boost regional developmen­t and not for military purposes, the move will still probably irritate India.”

India is always disgusted when neighborin­g countries attempt to get closer to China, Zhao explained.

The 25-meter-wide highway between Xigaze peace airport and Xigaze has four double lanes and is classified a first-tier highway, the Tibet Financial Daily reported. “Highways in China are of a high standard including the one in Tibet,” Zhao said. “It can be used by armored vehicles and as a runway for planes to take off when it has to serve a military purpose.”

Economic benefits

“The road is Tibet’s first real highway. It is our gift toward the upcoming 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China,” said Wei Qianggao, deputy head of the Tibet transporta­tion department, news portal eastday.com reported.

As an important traffic program in the 13th Five-Year Plan and a core section of the Tibet Autonomous Region’s highway network, the road will benefit the export-oriented economy of Xigaze and the complex traffic around Lhasa, Wei said.

Over five years, the standard of highways in Tibet and the traffic network have been gradually improved, Xinhua reported on Friday quoting Wang Jinhe, another official from the Tibet transporta­tion department. The total highway mileage in Tibet reached more than 80,000 kilometers in 2016, increasing nearly 19,000 kilometers since 2011, Wang said. Traffic infrastruc­ture constructi­on will improve the economy by linking airportroa­d businesses with city-to-city businesses, Wang Daiyuan, a professor from the Tibet Academy of Social Sciences told the Global Times.

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