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Wednesday, 21 November, 2001, 12:24 GMT
China cracks down on cybercafes
Parents are complaining that their children are hooked
By Duncan Hewitt in Shanghai
The Chinese authorities say they have closed more than 17,000 internet cafes as part of a sustained campaign to tighten controls on the internet.
Another 28,000 have been ordered to install special monitoring software.
China and the internet
27 million users
Four million cybercafe users
Over 17,000 cafes shut down
28,000 to use monitoring software
Over 94,000 cafes checked since April
Shanghai's Wen Hui newspaper said the campaign had scored a preliminary success in cleaning up problems which it said included an excessive number of internet cafes, and sloppy management.
The latest figures from what may be the world's largest-ever internet clean-up show that Chinese police and commercial officials have checked more than 94,000 cafes since April.
According to Wen Hui, just over half had their licences renewed, but almost 17,500 were closed down.
The clean-up was ordered by China's cabinet, partly in response to complaints from parents that their children were becoming hooked on internet chat rooms, or on the computer games and pornographic websites which many internet cafes offered to attract customers.
The authorities also want to prevent access to political and dissident websites, and those belonging to some foreign media organisations.
And Wen Hui said all licensed internet cafes are now installing special security software which blocks access to such sites, and keeps a record of which web pages a user has visited.
Internet licence
Internet cafes, many consisting of just a few computers in a room, are used by over four million of China's estimated 27 million internet users.
Some youths will submerge themselves in internet bars
for long periods, playing unhealthy games and adversely
affecting their development as normal students
Wen Hui newspaper
But there have been frequent reports of teenagers staying out all night, or being robbed by people they have met in internet chat rooms.
Many cities have now banned internet cafes from areas near schools, and are limiting young people's access to them.
And in Shanghai, several thousand middle school students have received what is called an internet driving licence, after taking special training courses designed to protect them from the perils of the World Wide Web.
Related to this story:
Chinese website creator goes on trial
(13 Feb 01 | Asia-Pacific)
China moves to control internet
(29 Dec 00 | Asia-Pacific)
China charges web entrepreneur
(15 Jul 00 | Asia-Pacific)
China cracks down on internet cafes
(02 Feb 00 | Asia-Pacific)
Can governments control the internet?
(29 Jan 00 | Asia-Pacific)
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