Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

China mulls banning children from gaming after midnight to combat internet addiction

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

BEIJING: Children in China could be banned from playing online games after midnight under a new rule designed to combat internet addiction amid rising concerns over mushroomin­g military style “boot camp” treatment centres.

The rules, released by the Cyberspace Administra­tion of China last week, call on schools to work with “institutio­ns” to help rehabilita­te young internet addicts, raising concerns about the risks to children at “boot camp” treatment centres.

If the regulation­s go into effect, web game developers would have to block minors from playing online games from midnight to 8 am, Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post reported.

Anybody under the age of 18 would have to register for the games with their identity cards and the informatio­n would be stored on the game operator’s servers.

The games should be designed to deter young people from becoming addicted and software should be developed to detect under-age users.

The draft rules are open to public feedback until the end of the month, the report said.

The regulation­s are the latest official effort to stop young people from spending too much time on online games.

Last month, a 16-year-old girl killed her mother because she was angered by the harsh treatment she received when she was sent to an internet addiction treatment centre. The girl said she had been beaten and illtreated at the “boot camp” in Shandong province where she spent four months.

According to the China Internet Network Informatio­n Centre, 23% of China’s internet users were aged below 19, as of June 2016, with the total number of internet users stated to be 750 million.

Military-style “boot camps” promoting themselves as treatment centres for internet addiction have flourished in China.

Some reportedly use extreme methods such as electric shocks and other physical punishment to wean clients off online games.

Lawyer Wang Qiushi said he feared the regulation­s would lead to more of the boot camps.

“This is a disaster for Chinese teenagers,” Wang said.

“More such boot camps might emerge after the passage of this regulation. It will encourage more people to get into the ‘business’,” Yue Xiaodong, a City University of Hong Kong psychologi­st said.

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