China relaxes curbs on foreign Web sites
Beijing eases access after days of intense criticism.
BEIJING - China yesterday opened major cracks in its Great Firewall, allowing Internet users in the nation's largest cities rare glimpses at foreign Web sites that censors had blocked for years.
The Beijing regime loosened its Internet restrictions after several days of intense foreign criticism that it had reneged on a pledge to relax censorship around the Aug. 8-24 Beijing Olympic Games.
In a highly unusual meeting with foreign journalists early yesterday, President Hu Jintao said that China would stand by the pledges of openness it made in 2001 when it was bidding for the right to host this year's Games.
"The Chinese government and the Chinese people have been working in real earnest to honor the commitments made to the international community," Hu told the journalists.
At the televised news conference, Hu warned foreign journalists to abide by Chinese laws but said that even after the Games were over, China would "welcome foreign journalists and facilitate their reporting."
Hours earlier, the International Olympic Committee and China had appeared to be at loggerheads over the nation's continued blocking of numerous foreign Internet sites.
An IOC statement said that two senior IOC officials, Hein Verbruggen and Gilbert Felli, had met with Chinese officials Thursday to discuss Internet access problems encountered by early arrivals among about 20,000 accredited journalists expected for the Games.
China now has 253 million Internet users.
Shortly after Hu's meeting with foreign reporters, the broad easing of Internet controls was readily apparent in Beijing and Shanghai, China's two largest cities.
The easing of Internet controls left some foreign groups exhilarated at the novelty.
"We have been blocked since 2003. The fact that our Web site is unblocked is very good news," said Vincent Brossel, the head of the Asia desk of Reporters Without Borders. The Paris-based group has been harshly critical of China's censorship and the imprisonment of dozens of Chinese journalists and dissidents for their postings on the Internet.
Web sites run by human-rights groups such as Amnesty International also were unblocked.
The main Pentagon Web site became accessible, as did numerous foreign media sites, such as those of Germany's Deutsche Welle; the anti-Beijing Apple Daily of Hong Kong; the Liberty Times of Taiwan; and Radio Free Asia, a U.S. government-supported station critical of rights abuses in China.
A smattering of Web sites remained blocked, however, including those linked to the banned Falun Gong spiritual movement, the government-in-exile of overseas Tibetans and, curiously, the HuffingtonPost.com and China Digital Times, a news aggregator at the University of California at Berkeley.
Some experts on Chinese Internet usage cautioned that the opening was more symbolic than real because most Chinese Internet users do not read languages other than Chinese and almost never visit foreign Web sites.
"For the overwhelming majority of Internet users in China, this doesn't mean anything," said Kaiser Kuo, the head of digital strategy for Ogilvy China, part of a global advertising firm.