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From: "James Lucier" <vze29z9k_at_verizon.net>
To: <declan_at_well.com>
Subject: For FC: New Amnesty Int'l Report Shows China's Internet Police
Are Brutally Efficient
Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 22:06:39 -0500
Hi Declan: Thought I would pass this on for the benefit or fellow
Politechnicals. You may need a Chinese language version of the
Politechbot. Jim Lucier
http://www.theweeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/002/040yffaq.asp
Caught in the Web
A new Amnesty International report reveals that China's Internet police
force is brutally efficient--and becoming more so every day.
by Katherine Mangu-Ward
12/19/2002 1:45:00 AM
Katherine Mangu-Ward, editorial assistant
NO ONE CAN BE SURE of the exact size of China's Internet police force, but
estimates hover between 30,000 and 40,000 officers. And their back-up is
impressive--China has just spent $200 million on new firewall technology as
well. But for those who still try to access forbidden material, China's
punishment is swift and severe.
Amnesty International recently released a report compiling records of 33
"prisoners of conscience who have been detained for using the Internet to
circulate or download information."
One of the cases Amnesty highlights is the story of Chen Shaowen, charged
with "subverting state power." He was caught "browsing repeatedly
reactionary web sites" as well as "sending in numerous articles of all
sorts, fabricating, distorting and exaggerating relevant facts, and
vilifying the Chinese Communist party and socialist system."
Chen's most recent article was about a group of workers in his hometown of
Lianyuan who lost their jobs and now drive three-wheeled motor-cabs for
hire. In July, the city government banned the cabs, and the workers
retaliated by saying they would set up a self-help association to protect
their interests: "We would prefer to suffer hardship than to give up hope."
This stirring tale of self-reliance and entrepreneurship would command
several column inches in some decent American papers, but in China it has
earned Chen a spot in the clink.
Other notable cases chronicled in the Amnesty report:
"--Wang Youcai, founder of the China Democracy Party (CDP), was sentenced
to 11 years' imprisonment for subversion in December 1999. Two of the
accusations against Wang involved sending e-mail to Chinese dissidents
abroad and accepting overseas funds to buy a computer."
--"Lin Hai, a computer engineer from Shanghai, was arrested in March 1998
and is considered to be the first person to have been sentenced for
Internet use in China. He was accused of providing 30,000 e-mail addresses
to VIP Reference, a U.S.-based online pro-democracy magazine, and charged
with subversion and sentenced to two years in prison in June 1999."
[...]
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Received on Dec 22 2002