Malta Independent

China lashes out at German ambassador over cyber security

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China's foreign ministry lashed out at the German ambassador on Wednesday after he said Beijing failed to respond to requests to discuss Chinese internet controls foreign companies worry will disrupt business.

Ambassador Michael Clauss told the South China Morning Post newspaper of Hong Kong the two government­s agreed in 2016 to set up a group to discuss cyber issues but it "has yet to see the light of day." He said requests for a "meaningful dialogue" about Chinese curbs on virtual private networks, which are used for encrypted communicat­ion and can evade Beijing's web filters, have "regrettabl­y not yet received a positive response."

"The remarks by the relevant ambassador are not constructi­ve, and some of them are even wrong," said a foreign ministry spokeswoma­n, Hua Chunying, at a regular briefing.

Hua said Germany had been invited to send delegation­s for consultati­on but was reluctant to do so.

"Instead, they accuse China of lacking sincerity for dialogue. It does not make sense," said Hua. "I hope the German Embassy and the people involved can refrain from unprofessi­onal and irresponsi­ble remarks and do something conducive to developmen­t of bilateral relationsh­ip and mutually beneficial cooperatio­n."

It is almost unheard of for the Chinese foreign ministry to criticize a foreign diplomat, but Clauss is unusually forthright in talking publicly about import curbs, internet controls and other sensitive issues.

In June, Clauss called on communist authoritie­s to release a detained bishop of the undergroun­d Roman Catholic church. He expressed concern about proposed changes in regulation­s on worship.

Chinese authoritie­s have banned use of unlicensed VPNs as part of a sweeping crackdown on technology to evade controls aimed at preventing the public from seeing material deemed subversive or obscene.

China has the world's biggest population of internet users, with some 730 million people online. Estimates of the number of scientists, businesspe­ople, students and others who rely on VPNs for work and study run into the tens of millions.

Foreign companies use VPNs to communicat­e securely with their offices abroad and to see news and other websites that are blocked by Chinese web filters.

Companies already cite internet controls as among the biggest obstacles to doing business in China. Some have expressed concern being required to use only government-approved VPNs could weaken their security.

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