2015-08-05
 
2015858a4bb71f-a723-4503-8aee-ba7bbbc3f125.jpeg (622×402)
A man surfs the Internet at a coffee shop in Beijing in a file photo.
 AFP
 
The ruling Chinese Communist Party looks set to further tighten its grip on the nation’s 650 million netizens with the stationing of specialist police officers in major Internet companies.
 
“We will further deepen and expand our construction of police Internet security stations, setting them up in major websites and Internet enterprises,” China’s ministry of public security said in a statement on its website seen by RFA on Wednesday.
 
“[This will enable police to] respond immediately to any situations in which illegal behavior or crime is suspected, helping and directing websites to expand their capacity to manage online security,” it said.
 
Hacker attacks, “violent terrorist information,” fraud and data theft, pornography and gambling are mushrooming online, posing a serious threat to social stability and national security, according to the statement.
 
Police should “play a dominant role” in the management of online security, it said.
 
The New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) meanwhile warned of provisions in a draft Cybersecurity Law that will put greater pressure on Internet companies to police the online behavior of their customers.
 
“The Chinese government should scrap provisions in the proposed Cybersecurity Law that require Internet companies to practice censorship, register users’ real names, localize data, and aid government surveillance,” HRW wrote in a submission to China’s parliament, the National People’s Congress (NPC) on the draft law.
 
Tightening Beijing’s grip
 
According to HRW China director Sophie Richardson, the law will further tighten Beijing’s already fierce grip on the country’s netizens.
 
“While the Chinese government is known for its obsession with Internet control, the draft law sends a clear and chilling message of intent to further control online expression,” Richardson said.
 
“The law will effectively put China’s Internet companies, and hundreds of millions of Internet users, under greater state control,” she said.
 
If passed, the law will force companies to censor content and restrict online anonymity, store user data and monitor what users are doing online, according to HRW.
 
Internet companies in China are already expected to censor messages, assist police in tracking down Internet users who post messages critical of the government, and require users to register with their real personal information, but enforcement of these rules has been uneven, the group said.
 
Enshrining their enforced cooperation in law will further reduce any leeway that Internet users have, and possibly close off existing loopholes, it said.
 
And another group has warned that proposed amendments to China’s Criminal Law look set to legalize already current forms of human rights abuses in the country and further restrict the activities of lawyers, rights activists, netizens and journalists.
 
The draft amendments widen the definition of public order offenses like “gathering a crowd to disrupt public order” to include anyone who gives money or helps to organize a gathering, even if they don’t themselves attend, which could include people who simply retweet information about a protest.