The Philippine Star

China adopts controvers­ial cyber security law

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BEIJING (Reuters) – China adopted a controvers­ial cyber security law on Monday to counter what Beijing says are growing threats such as hacking and terrorism, but the law triggered concerns among foreign business and rights groups.

The legislatio­n, passed by China’s largely rubber-stamp parliament and set to take effect in June 2017, is an “objective need” of China as a major internet power, a parliament official said.

Overseas critics of the law say it threatens to shut foreign technology companies out of various sectors deemed “critical,” and includes contentiou­s requiremen­ts for security reviews and for data to be stored on servers in China.

Rights advocates also say the law will enhance restrictio­ns on China’s internet, already subject to the world’s most sophistica­ted online censorship mechanism, known outside China as the Great Firewall.

Yang Heqing, an official on the National People’s Congress standing committee, said the internet was already deeply linked to China’s national security and developmen­t.

“China is an internet power, and as one of the countries that faces the greatest internet se- curity risks, urgently needs to establish and perfect network security legal systems,” he told reporters at the close of a bimonthly legislativ­e meeting.

More than 40 global business groups petitioned Chinese Premier Li Keqiang in August, urging Beijing to amend what they said were controvers­ial sections of the law. Chinese officials have said it would not interfere with foreign business interests.

Contentiou­s provisions remained in the final draft issued by the parliament, including requiremen­ts for “critical informatio­n infrastruc­ture operators” to store personal informatio­n and important business data in China, provide unspecifie­d “technical support” to security agencies, and pass national security reviews.

Those demands have raised concerns within companies that fear they would have to hand over intellectu­al property or open back doors within products in order to operate in China’s market.

James Zimmerman, chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in China, called the provisions “vague, ambiguous and subject to broad interpreta­tion by regulatory authoritie­s.”

Human Rights Watch said elements of the law, such as criminaliz­ing the use of the internet to “damage national unity,” would further restrict online freedom.

“Despite widespread internatio­nal concern from corporatio­ns and rights advocates for more than a year, Chinese authoritie­s pressed ahead with this restrictiv­e law without making meaningful changes,” Sophie Richardson, China Director at Human Rights Watch, said in an emailed statement.

Zhao Zeliang, director of the Cyberspace Administra­tion of China’s cyber security coordinati­on bureau, told reporters that every article in the law accorded with rules of internatio­nal trade, and China would not close the door on foreign companies.

“They believe that (phrases such as) secure and independen­t control, secure and reliable, that these are signs of trade protection­ism. That they are synonymous. This is a kind of misunderst­anding, a kind of prejudice,” Zhao said.

China’s foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang told a regular press briefing that the law was similar to other countries’ rules and did not distinguis­h between foreign and Chinese companies.

Many of the provisions had been previously applied in practice, but their formal codificati­on coincides with China’s adoption of a series of other regulation­s on national security and foreign civil society groups.

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