NO MORE CYBERCAFE LICENCES FOR CHINA
8 June 2007
Crackdown required to reduce to harm to young
people, say officials
Citing the need to reduce the potential for harm to
young people, Chinese officials will not license any
more Internet cafes this year while regulators carry out
an industry-wide inspection.
Investigators will look into whether Internet cafes are
improperly renting out their licenses or failing to
register their customers' identities, the State
Administration for Industry and Commerce said on its Web
site.
"Industry and commerce bureaus at all levels must not
license any new Internet cafes in 2007," said a Chinese
government notice, dated May 30.
The communist government encourages Web use for business
and education, but authorities are worried it gives
children access to violent games, sexually explicit
material and gambling Web sites, reports Associated
Press.
Chinese President Hu Jintao has ordered Chinese
authorities to clean up "Internet culture," and the
government has launched a crackdown on online
pornography involving thousands of police officials that
has resulted in over 50 000 sites being inspected and
more than 8 000 links to pornographic sites being
blocked. Police officers in the Guangdong provincial
bureau of public security said 55 suspects involved in
43 cases had been detained, according to reports in the
Chinese Economic Net. More than 1 million yuan ($130
000) in cash had also been confiscated.
In a separate case, on May 27, police in Jieyang, in the
eastern part of Guangdong, broke up a major Internet
soccer-betting ring, detaining 28 suspects. Police
raided 11 properties in Jieyang, Guangzhou and Shenzhen,
all of which were believed to be associated with the
gambling network.
Two sedan cars and 42 computers were seized.
Provincial spokesmen said police in the province would
continue the campaign to crack down on online crime for
the remainder of the year, and urged local people to
refrain from visiting illegal websites.
China has the world's second-largest population of
Internet users, with 137 million people online, and is
on track to surpass the United States as the largest
online population within the next two years, Associated
Press reports. The government tries to block access to
online material deemed obscene or subversive.
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