维吾尔人权项目即将发布:维吾尔人的疆土,中国的边疆:新疆工作会议及中央政府指导下的发展为题的中文报告。该报告英文版发布于2012年6月;本报告检审始自2010年新疆工作会的,由中国中央政府指导下在东突厥斯坦实施的史无前例的投资发展政策及其后果。
VOA News
February 17, 2011
China's Foreign Ministry on Thursday warned the United States not to use Internet access issues as a "pretext" to interfere in China's internal affairs.
The warning came in response to a speech by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton Tuesday, during which she urged governments to end Internet censorship or risk the kind social and political unrest currently sweeping through the Middle East.
Clinton also said the administration would spend $25 million this year on initiatives to protect bloggers and help them circumvent Beijing's efforts to curb Chinese access to foreign websites.
Since Clinton's address, Chinese Internet censors appear to have deleted U.S. embassy posts promoting the secretary's address. According to the Associated Press, online searches for the word "Hillary" in Chinese have been blocked on at least one site. And Reuters news agency quotes embassy spokesman Richard Buangan as saying he was unable to post information unrelated to Clinton's speech on the embassy website Thursday.
At a regular news briefing Thursday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu repeated his government's standard position the Internet freedom in China is guaranteed by law. But he also said Beijing remains opposed to foreign interference in Chinese affairs.
Secretary of State Clinton also used Tuesday's speech to point out the role Twitter and Facebook played in uprisings in the Middle East.Both social networking sites are blocked in China.
Beijing also routinely blocks websites of foreign news organizations, including VOA, and blocks topics it considers sensitive, including the uprising that toppled Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.