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deputy chief of the Internet Affairs Bureau of the State Council Information Office, China

A Chinese government official Tuesday defended China’s right to censor information on the Internet, and said no individual has been arrested for “just releasing a comment on the Internet,” according to state media reports. After studying Internet legislation in the West, I’ve found we basically have identical legislative objectives and principles.Liu Zhengrong>Text

Liu Zhengrong, deputy chief of the Internet Affairs Bureau of the State Council Information Office, argued that China’s efforts to control the Internet are no different from those of Western countries. “After studying Internet legislation in the West, I’ve found we basically have identical legislative objectives and principles,” Liu said, quoted in one report.

Despite Liu’s assertion that no Chinese Internet users have been jailed for posting online, such information has been obtained from Yahoo Inc. and used to build cases against users jailed for leaking state secrets and inciting subversion.

Yahoo, Google Inc. and Microsoft Corp.’s MSN division have come under scrutiny recently over their operations in China. Google has taken heat for offering a censored version of its search engine for China, while MSN was criticized for removing a blog written by a Chinese journalists.

Liu challenged critics of the country’s Internet censorship efforts. “It is unfair and smacks of double standards when [they] criticize China for deleting illegal and harmful messages while it is legal for U.S. Web sites to do so,” he said, adding that foreign Internet companies are bound to follow China’s laws when operating in the country.

Liu’s comments came one day before the U.S. House of Representative’s Subcommittee on Global Human Rights, Africa and International Operations plans to hold hearings regarding how U.S. Internet companies operate in China.

Representatives from Microsoft, Yahoo, Google, Cisco Systems Inc., and Reporters Without Borders, are expected to attend those hearings, scheduled for Wednesday.

The Internet is by nature a disruptive force, and when it comes to China, the Western world doesn’t have a clue. The Chinese have every right to progess on their own schedule. The last thing the world needs is a China out of control. I am a very big proponent of the power of the Internet. But I am also apprehensive about putting too much pressure on China to reform. They have kept themselves together for thousands of years. By comparison, the USA is young and immature. So is Canada. – Barry Monette, Renfrew, Ontario

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