Jonathan Richards
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China has closed down access to several of the world's most popular websites in an apparent attempt to censor international coverage of the violence that is unfolding in Lhasa, the Tibetan capital.
YouTube, the video-sharing website which has become a home to amateur footage of news events, has been blocked to Chinese users since Saturday, and there are also reports that the news pages of Yahoo!, the internet portal, have been made inaccessible.
In addition, the entire Guardian website has been closed down as of today, and other sites - including Times Online - have had access to their coverage of recent events in Tibet severely restricted.
Popular sites which assimilate news from different sources - such as Google News - have been subject to what is known as 'keyword filtering', where a Chinese internet user attempting to load a page which contains words such as 'Tibet' or 'Dalai Lama' will see the site stall.
Times Online has also learned that the editors of some of the most popular 'forum' - or bulletin board - sites in China have been directly contacted by government officials and told not to publish any content relating to the recent protests.
Flickr, the photo-sharing website, Wikipedia, and the LA Times, the US newspaper, are among the other sites to which access has been cut off.
"There's definitely been a ramping up of keyword filtering in recent days, particularly for words like Tibet and protest," said Jeremy Goldkorn, the editor of danwei.org, a site which translates news from various Chinese sources into English. "The whole internet has also slowed down, which is almost certainly connected with authorities' attempts to censor content."
The websites of most British newspapers are for the most part accessible, but since Friday, for instance, all articles by the Times Beijing correspondent, Jane Macartney, have been blocked to readers in China.
One comment on danwei.org today read: "I'm in the south of China, and many news sites containing Tibet-related articles are blocked with connection reset errors. This includes the entire Guardian website, as well as all news links from Yahoo."
Another read: "It's about midnight of the 16/17th, and Yahoo's homepage is blocked. They have headlines on the protests/riots up, so I'm not surprised."
China now has more than 210 million internet users - more than in the US, according to the government-backed China Network Information Centre - and authorities are notoriously strict about the sites which they are able to access.
YouTube has been blocked in the past, and the so-called Great Firewall of China prevents discussion of and searches for many sensitive topics, such as the Tiananmen Square protests.
Censorship is made easier by the fact that the country has relatively few internet service providers (ISPs) - the gateways through which all Western content must pass before it is seen from within China - meaning that software which runs 'keyword' checks on sites can readily be installed.
"In many ways, the technical solution - filtering software etc - is enough for the authorities here," Mr Goldkorn said. "You have to remember that the Chinese education system paints a very different picture of Tibet to that which is understood in the West, and it's likely many Chinese are simply not curious enough to try to make the effort to search out an alternative view of events."
Reporters Without Borders, the group which campaigns for press freedom, said today: "Yet again the Chinese government is trampling on the promises it made linked to the Olympics and has preparing the ground to crackdown on the Tibetan revolt in the absence of witnesses."
A spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in London was not available for comment.
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"You have to remember that the Chinese education system paints a very different picture of Tibet to that which is understood in the West"
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On the otherside the western media paints another story of Tibet. With the r&&%$sh we get in the news nowadays, who can we believe?? The only way to truth is Go to Tibet to see for yourselves.
Sherry, Reading, UK, Aussie expat
But why the Wikipedia is totally blocked but YouTube is blocked just sometimes? According to specific political or economical situation? Hmm... Anyway I'm for the freedom of speech, and can say, that if Chinese people cannot change their government policy; they should find another way how to learn the truth. For example any VPN services like http://strongvpn.com Guarantee safe, reliable and anonymous surfing. If illness appears the medicine would appear soon)
Berd, Minsk, Belarus
Interesting stuff.
If you speak to Chinese people about Internet filtering they will often tell you that their government is doing them a favour by filtering western propaganda.
The Chinese have been brought up to believe very different things about Taiwan, Tibet and Tiananmen. It's not surprising that they view western media as a menace that should be controlled.
Through the looking glass indeed!
John , Taipei ,
Having failed to open the Guardian website, I fortunately open the page of the Guardian G24 to read the news to improve English as usual, just like reading the Times and New York Times. I actually don't pay attention to the event, instead I just want to read English articles. The obvious thing is the slow speed which tells us that information about violence and Tibet has been severely restricted. It is, however, quite understandable that the Chinese government have to maintain social stability before the commencement of the Olympic Game in 8 August. From my own perspective, I believe that the Chinese government will tackle the problems in a good manner.
JOHN, Shanghai, China
this censorship reminds me of one comment by a beijing citizen aired on the Chinese English news station during sars in 2002-3. When asked if he was worried about catching sars the elderly beijinger replied "No, the government doesn't tell us anything so we don't know what to worry about." It was aired only once!
That's just typical of the attitude of most people here in China, they don't know, so most don't know what to care about! Issues like Japanese school books are used to direct public attention away from issues that the government might be criticised for.
Things like the rail link into the Autonomous region and the economic development of (mostly han owned) business are seen as benefiting the region rather than the exercise in cultural imperialism that the Chinese gov's management of the region is looked on by most in the west.
Jack, Shanghai, China
"You have to remember that the Chinese education system paints a very different picture of Tibet to that which is understood in the West"
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Right... i'm sure the West know alot more about Tibet than the Chinese, and they know more about Mexico than we do. So that's why we've both been struggling with understanding of our neighbors!
Jim, Boston,
It is a very strong feeling that Tibet is a failuing area which as ruled by the communist party .However, the Western give priority to the bad image over the sustainble progress in economic, lifestyle and other many things made by the Tibet's goverment and people.
On the other hand, The goverment of China should not block those web sites for blind the people who lived in the mainland
Jim,Zhang, Nanjing, China
The Chinese government wouldn't happen to be using American technology to block websites, would it? Perhaps someone from Cisco Systems might care to comment.
Andrew, Sydney, Australia
With foreign journalists banned, tourist SIM cards confiscated and internet news/sharing sites down the world is experiencing a classic piece of Chinese propaganda. How many viewers will understand the subjective are carefully released images as what is really happening in Tibet? This is a sad time not only for Tibetans but for anyone who holds freedom of speech and a free press dear.
Matthijs, London , United Kingdom
China's oppressive regime means that the Chinese government must choose between modern technology or continuance of its totalitarian practices, for it cannot have both., and choosing the latter over the former becomes ever less sustainable as technology progresses.
James E. Petts, Burnham, England