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FC: Burma restricts political websites -- no surprise
From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Date: Thu, 20 Jan 2000 17:53:32 -0500
Here's my report from a trip to Burma and my interview with Aung San Suu Kyi:
http://www.y2kculture.com/mccullagh/burma.1296.txt
This BBC article was surprisingly mild -- when I was in Rangoon in '96, a
BBC correspondent was beaten up ostensibly accidentally by the SLORC and
deported. Tanks were in the streets to intimidate student protesters,
making Net-censorship arguably the least of their concerns. And where
political freedom is lacking, so is economic liberty: one student I stayed
with made $20 a month in his full-time job, about enough to log on probably
every decade or two.
-Declan
*********
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/asia-pacific/newsid_611000/611836.stm
Thursday, 20 January, 2000, 13:40 GMT
Burmese ban on political websites
By regional analyst James Miles
The Burmese authorities have banned
the country's internet users from
issuing material of a political nature.
Burmese television said the country's
only authorised internet service
provider, Myanmar Post and
Telecommunications, had outlawed
the use of sites which were - as it
put it - detrimental to government
policies.
The regulations will come as no
surprise in a country that has been
among the most hostile in Asia
towards the internet revolution.
Burma has
lagged behind
even some of
Asia's most
authoritarian
countries such
as China and
Vietnam in its
embrace of the
internet.
[...]
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