US slams Great Firewall as 'a burden' on businesses

It labels China's online curbs as trade barrier for 1st time since 2013

BEIJING • China's Internet censorship has been labelled as a trade barrier by the United States in a report for the first time since 2013, which added that worsening online restrictions are damaging the business of US companies.

Since Mr Xi Jinping became China's President that year, the US had not listed China's so-called Great Firewall as a trade impediment despite widespread outcry that the online blocks limit access to information and search services.

"Outright blocking of websites appears to have worsened over the past year, with eight of the top 25 most trafficked global sites now blocked in China," the US Trade Representative (USTR) wrote in its annual report on trade barriers.

"Over the past decade, China's filtering of cross-border Internet traffic has posed a significant burden to foreign suppliers, hurting both Internet sites themselves, and users who often depend on them for their business," the USTR said in the report, released last week.

The move could push the issue beyond a sticking point in bilateral ties over human rights and security, though with a litany of trade disputes already on the table, the degree to which it will feature in talks remains to be seen.

China has long operated the world's most sophisticated online censorship mechanism known as the Great Firewall. The websites for Google's services, Facebook and Twitter are all inaccessible in China. Officials say controls help maintain social stability and national security in the face of threats like terrorism.

Under Mr Xi, Beijing has implemented an unprecedented tightening of Internet controls, and sought to codify the policy within the law.

According to data from the anti-censorship group GreatFire.org, almost a quarter of the hundreds of thousands of webpages, domains, encrypted sites, online searches and IP addresses that it monitors in China were blocked as of early April. That was up from 14 per cent at the time Mr Xi assumed the presidency.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei told a regular briefing yesterday that a country's independent choice for Internet governance should be respected.

"China's Internet is vigorously expanding and providing vast space for companies from other countries to grow," Mr Hong said. "China's policy to attract foreign investment will not change."

The Cyberspace Administration of China did not immediately respond to faxed questions, while the Ministry of Commerce declined to comment.

Foreign business lobbies have long complained that Chinese Internet restrictions go beyond inconvenience and actually limit business competitiveness.

The American Chamber of Commerce in China said in its most recent report on China's business environment that its members faced "severe challenges competing in China's telecommunications and Internet sectors due to investment restrictions, security controls and a range of protectionist measures".

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on April 09, 2016, with the headline US slams Great Firewall as 'a burden' on businesses. Subscribe