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China Punishes Google
Over Porn Allegations
By Stephanie Ho
25 June 2009
China says it has taken
unspecified punitive actions against the Google search engine, which it
accuses of violating Chinese law by spreading pornography. The official
comments come as computer users in China experience intermittent
difficulty accessing Google.
China has recently stepped up its criticism of the world's biggest
search engine.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang was asked Thursday about
recent difficulties computer users in China have had accessing Google
and its related sites.
He says the Chinese government is carrying out its duty to protect young
people from online pornography.
Qin says Chinese authorities have found that Google is spreading
"pornographic, lewd and vulgar content," in violation of China's laws
and regulations.
He says Chinese authorities have summoned the company's representatives
and urged them to immediately remove the objectionable content.
Qin urged Google to abide by Chinese laws and regulations and said
Chinese authorities have taken "punitive measures," although he gave no
details. He also gave no specific examples of Google's alleged lewd
content.
Access to Google in Beijing was temporarily interrupted Wednesday. As of
Thursday afternoon, Google access for computer users at some of
Beijing's universities was still blocked.
Google
recently issued a statement saying it would step up efforts to stop
pornography from reaching users in China. A Google spokeswoman is quoted
by media Thursday as saying the California-based company is now looking
into reports that users in China cannot access Google.
Beijing's latest comments come days before a Chinese-government set
deadline for all computers sold in China to come packaged with Internet
filtering software, known as "Green Dam."
Wednesday, U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke and U.S. Trade
Representative Ron Kirk wrote a letter to Chinese officials, raising
concerns that Beijing's order may violate free-trade commitments.
When asked about the latest American concerns that Green Dam could
become a trade issue, the Chinese spokesman said he had nothing to add
to earlier comments that the software is necessary to stop online
pornography. |