The Star Malaysia

Stealth crackdown: China censorship extends to Twitter

-

Beijing,:

Despite being blocked in China, Twitter and other overseas social media sites have long been used freely by activists and government critics to address subjects that are censored on domestic forums – until now.

As Beijing presses a campaign to throttle any remaining voices that stray from the Communist Party narrative, it is extending its reach to foreign sites outside of its “Great Firewall” of Internet censorship.

People in China can use virtual private network (VPN) software to circumvent Beijing’s controls and access blocked foreign sites.

But fearful that the platforms could be used to coordinate political activity, the authoritie­s have launched a stealth crackdown over the past year.

Chinese activists and other Twitter users say they have been pressured by police to delete sensitive tweets.

It’s a “silent slaughter”, said Yaxue Cao, founder of human rights site China Change.

In some cases, Chinese authoritie­s may be getting access to and deleting accounts themselves.

Last Friday, Cao reported that the Twitter account of Wu Gan, a Chinese activist sentenced last December to eight years in prison for subversion, had been suddenly deleted – erasing more than 30,000 posts representi­ng years of political critique and commentary.

A Chinese Twitter user who requested anonymity said he was taken in by police over tweets critical of the Communist Party.

After being held at a police station overnight, the user was made to hand over login informatio­n and watch police delete the tweets.

“You don’t know what kind of crime they’ll sentence you with.

“There’s no due process, so you feel scared,” said the Twitter user, forced to write a letter of repentance and warned against further tweeting. “Once they threaten you, you’ll do what they say.”

Twitter declined to comment when contacted.

Under President Xi Jinping, China has increased scrutiny of social media platforms and sought to restrict access to VPN software.

Authoritie­s have not launched a full crackdown on VPNs, however, because both Chinese and foreign companies need them to do business.

On Monday, the Cyberspace Administra­tion of China said it had “cleaned up” 9,800 accounts on Chinese social media platforms like messaging app WeChat and the Twitter-like Weibo that it accused of spreading “politicall­y harmful” informatio­n and rumours.

The Internet regulator also chas- tised the sites for negligence and “irresponsi­bility”.

Chinese Twitter users have been targeted before – one was arrested in 2012 for joking about a building collapsing on a political meeting.

But the recent police activity indicates a more concerted clampdown, triggered by an exodus of users from censored platforms that has resulted in a stronger Chinese Twitter presence, said writer and activist Li Xuewen.

“It’s the latest trend,” said Li, who was detained in 2017 over an online memorial to Liu Xiaobo, the Nobel Peace laureate and rights activist who died of liver cancer in police custody last year. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia