Millennium Post

China adopts disputable law on cybersecur­ity

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BEIJING: China on Monday adopted a sweeping cybersecur­ity law which it said was aimed at safeguardi­ng national security and s overeignty against hacking and terrorism, triggering concerns among rights groups and foreign companies in the Communist nation.

The new law was passed by the standing committee of the National People’s Congress (NPC), China’s rubber-stamp parliament.

According to the new law, the government will take measures to “monitor, defend and handle cybersecur­ity risks and threats originatin­g from within the country or overseas sources, protecting key informatio­n infrastruc­ture from attack, intrusion, disturbanc­e and damage”.

Efforts will also be made to punish criminal activities online and safeguard the order and security of cyberspace, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.

Under the new law, individual users and organisati­ons are not allowed to jeopardise security on the Internet or use it to “damage national security, honour and interests”.

Online activities that are attempts to overthrow the socialist system, split the nation, undermine national

According to the new law, the government will take measures to monitor, defend and handle cybersecur­ity risks and threats originatin­g from within the country or overseas sources, protecting key informatio­n infrastruc­ture from attack, intrusion, disturbanc­e and damage.

unity, advocate terrorism and extremism are all prohibited, according to the provisions, which also forbade activities including inciting ethnic hatred, discrimina­tion and spreading violence and obscene informatio­n online.

The law was passed at the bimonthly session of the NPC Standing Committee, which concluded on Monday, after a third reading.

China administer­s internet with massive firewalls to protect from outside interventi­ons.

It also effectivel­y banned social media outlets like Facebook and Twitter, and controls the local social media sites like Weibo through the firewalls blocking any content that harms the ruling Communist Party of China and the government.

China, often accused of backing cyberattac­ks on other countries and foriegn firms, has bolstered cybersecur­ity since Chinese President Xi Jinping assumed power four years ago.

Reacting sharply to the new law, Chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in China, James Zimmerman said, “We believe this is a step backwards for innovation in China that won’t do much to improve security.

“The Chinese government is right in wanting to ensure the security of digital systems and informatio­n here, but this law doesn t achieve that. What it does do is create barriers to trade and innovation,” he said in a statement.

“Broad restrictio­ns on cross-border data flows, for example, provide no security benefits but will create barriers to Chinese as well as foreign companies operating in industries where data needs to be shared internatio­nally.” Zimmerman said.

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