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Pro-democracy blogs launched on China's Sina, Sohu
US journalist tests limits of censorship...
By Reuters
Published: Wednesday 21 June 2006
A New York Times columnist has created Chinese-language blogs on two of China's most popular web portals to test the limits of the internet in China but one of them could not be accessed on Wednesday.
In new blogs on Sina and Sohu, Nicholas Kristof denounced the imprisonment of his Chinese colleague, Zhao Yan, and called for President Hu Jintao to set an example in the fight against corruption by disclosing his financial assets.
He also mentioned Falun Gong, a spiritual movement banned by Beijing as a cult in 1999, and described how on 4 June, 1989, he saw the Chinese army fire on Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protesters - both taboo subjects in China.
Zhao, 44, has pleaded not guilty to fraud and leaking state secrets but his lawyers expressed little hope that he would be cleared of charges for which he faces more than 10 years in jail.
Sohu appeared to have pulled the plug on Kristof's blog on Wednesday but his Sina blog could still be accessed.
A Sohu spokeswoman reached by telephone declined to comment.
Kristof wrote in his column: "The upshot is that China is much freer than its rulers would like." He shared the 1990 Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting with his wife, Sheryl WuDunn, for their coverage of the 1989 massacre.
He wrote, borrowing a quote from the late Chairman Mao Zedong: "To me, this trend looks unstoppable. I don't see how the Communist Party dictatorship can long survive the internet, at a time when a single blog can start a prairie fire."
In December, Microsoft shut down a blog at MSN Spaces belonging to Michael Anti, a Chinese researcher for The New York Times in Beijing, under Chinese government orders.
Google has come under criticism for toeing the government line by blocking hundreds of words or by denying access to politically sensitive websites.
China employs about 30,000 internet censors to filter politically sensitive information and help the Communist Party remain in power.
The search engines of Sina and Sohu resumed operation on Wednesday amid media speculation they had been closed down by the government after failing on-the-spot censorship tests.
Hong Kong's South China Morning Post, citing unnamed industry sources, said on Tuesday that Beijing had stepped up controls on portals that had failed to filter certain words deemed politically harmful.
But representatives of Sina and Sohu said their search engines had been closed on Monday afternoon for "system upgrading". They denied knowledge of any government crackdown.
The Ministry of Information Industry declined to comment.
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