China's Xi says internet must be "clean and righteous"
China's Xi says internet must be "clean and
righteous"
by Reuters Wednesday, 22 August 2018 12:42 GMT
BEIJING, Aug 22 (Reuters) - The internet must be
"clean and righteous" and vulgar content must be resisted in the
field of culture, Chinese President Xi Jinping told a meeting of senior
propaganda officials, state media said on Wednesday.
The government has been tightening controls over internet
content as part of what it says are efforts to maintain social stability,
taking on "vulgar" and pornographic content as well as the
unauthorised dissemination of news.
The moves come amid a broader clamp-down targeting online
content from livestreams and blogs to mobile gaming, as the country's leaders
look to tighten their grip over a huge and diverse cultural scene online
popular with China's youth.
Speaking at a two-day meeting, attended by officials from
major state media outlets and the internet regulator, Xi said propaganda
efforts needed to be put front and centre, the official Xinhua news agency
said.
"Uphold a clean and righteous internet space,"
the report cited Xi as saying.
China shut as many as 128,000 websites that contained
obscene and other "harmful" information in 2017, Xinhua reported in
January, citing government data.
China's media regulator has also been cracking down on
video spoofs, as part of the intensified crackdown on any content that is
deemed to be in violation of socialist core values under Xi.
Despite strict censorship, China has a fairly lively
online community of bloggers, who frequently respond to breaking events with
humorous - and sometimes risqué - sketches and short videos, although they
often face their posts being taken down.
Xi told the meeting that those who work in culture and
the arts had to express quality and responsibility and respect the law, Xinhua
said.
"Reject the vulgar, the base and the kitsch,"
Xi added. "Put forward more healthy, high quality internet works of
culture and art."
The government has stepped up already tight controls over
the internet since Xi took power six years ago, in what critics say is an
effort to restrict freedom of speech and prevent criticism of the ruling
Communist Party.
The government says all countries regulate the internet,
and its rules are aimed at ensuring national security and social stability and
preventing the spread of pornography and violent content.
China maintains a strict censorship regime, banning
access to many foreign news outlets, search engines and social media including
Google and Facebook.
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Simon
Cameron-Moore)
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