-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.smh.com.au/news/0010/28/world/world8.html
Click Here: <A HREF="http://www.smh.com.au/news/0010/28/world/world8.html">
Foreign media sites barred as Beijing tries to �</A>
-----


 -    WORLD

Foreign media sites barred as Beijing tries to stop information

Beijing: The Sydney Morning Herald's Web site, www.smh.com.au, may have
fallen victim to China's attempts to control domestic access to foreign
Internet sites.
Beat the ban
To access this site (or any other site outlawed the Chinese authorities for
that matter), call up one of these free services:
� Space proxy
� Anonymizer
� Rewebber/
� Secret surfer
Then, type in www.smh.com.au and you're ready to go.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Herald site has been unavailable through Chinese Internet service
providers (ISPs) for more than two weeks. Callers to the Herald bureau in
Beijing have said they have been unable to access it since soon after the
Olympics.
Other Australian media sites, including those of The Australian Financial
Review and The Australian, remain available.
Sources in the Ministry of Information Industry, which supervises network
access in China, have confirmed that the Herald site cannot be traced into
the domestic network. But no government agency appears willing or able to
shed any light on why.
The Foreign Ministry, the Public Security Bureau and the agencies responsible
for network access have all denied knowledge of or responsibility for a block
on the site. The Herald's sister paper, The Age, has been unreachable via
Chinese ISPs for more than a year. Fairfax's F2 site remains unaffected.
China routinely blocks the Web sites of certain overseas news organisations.
The New York Times and The Washington Post are rarely accessible, and the CNN
and the BBC sites are also often barred.
Human rights sites critical of the Government are also blocked.
In August the People's Daily, the mouthpiece of the Communist Party, called
on official media to strengthen their "political thought work" in the face of
a flood of information available via the Internet, which it described as a
"thought and public opinion battle front".

"Enemy forces at home and abroad are sparing no effort to use this battle
front to infiltrate us," the paper said.
The Internet poses a problem for China's political leaders, who are in two
minds about the free flow of information it makes possible.
A number of domestic sites that challenged the Government have been closed
this year.
Aside from political "Web dissidents", China has also targeted the banned
Falun Gong spiritual and meditation movement, pornography and criminal
activity.
The most recent figures indicate there are at least 17million Internet users
in China - slightly more than 1per cent of the population. The China National
Network Information Centre says the number doubled in the first half of this
year.
It is expected that China will become the world's largest Internet market in
the next five years.
- John Schauble
[go to top]
  In this section
Bush offers civility but then gets personal
Hillary chugging to victory on Grand Central express
Israel braces for suicide bombings
Police suspended after suspect beaten
'Demigod' reaches for new heights in Albright talks
Chill winds blowing for the West
Unfaithful partners may pay the price
Foreign media sites barred as Beijing tries to stop information
Big Brother shows he really cares
TV shows agony of killer disease's young victims
'Mad cow disease explosion in Britain would hit Australia, too'
More Holocaust queries over Pius the appeaser
Fugitive mafioso's juror lover faces trials of her own
Left looks to a Clinton clone to block Berlusconi's return
Mystery bombings terrorise paradise city
Night-time rehearsals are the key in birdland


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