Arab News

Beijing pushes ‘China solution’ for governing web

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BEIJING: Beijing said Thursday it will push a “China solution” to global cyber governance after releasing its first strategy paper outlining a vision of the web where individual countries control the informatio­n that flows across their borders.

The roll out is part of an effort by Beijing to play a more active role in shaping the management of the Internet, advocating what some critics have called a more atomized, less connected web.

Beijing wants “to put forward a ‘China scheme’ or a ‘China solution’ for the tough issue of cyber governance,” Long Zhou, the coordinato­r of cyber affairs at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told reporters at a briefing on the document, which was released late Wednesday.

While China is home to the world’s largest number of Internet users, a 2015 report by US think tank Freedom House found that the country had the most restrictiv­e online use policies of 65 nations it studied, ranking below Iran and Syria.

But China has maintained that its various forms of web censorship — collective­ly known as “The Great Firewall” — are necessary for protecting its national security.

Sites blocked due to their content or sensitivit­y, among them Facebook and Twitter, cannot be accessed in China without special software that allows users to bypass the strict controls.

In January, Beijing launched a cam- paign to crack down on such tools, known as virtual private networks (VPNs).

The campaign came after the passing of a controvers­ial cybersecur­ity bill last November, tightening restrictio­ns on online freedom of speech and imposing new rules on service providers.

China has “accumulate­d experience” in Internet management and plans to share its lessons with other countries, Long said, including Russia, which is seeking to tighten its own controls over the web.

Long played down concerns about China’s Internet management, saying its measures do not conflict with citizens’ rights and the free flow of informatio­n.

“There is no absolute freedom in this world,” Long said.

“Cyberspace may be virtual, but the people who use it are real, so cyberspace must not be beyond laws.”

Citing the UN Charter’s sovereignt­y principle, the strategy paper denounces cyber hegemony and interferin­g in other countries’ internal affairs.

 ??  ?? A visitor browses a booklet at a social network company booth, which enable people to connect global clients during the 2016 Global Mobile Internet Conference in Beijing in this April 28, 2016 file photo. (AP)
A visitor browses a booklet at a social network company booth, which enable people to connect global clients during the 2016 Global Mobile Internet Conference in Beijing in this April 28, 2016 file photo. (AP)

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