Thursday, December 30, 2010

China says anti-pornography campaign close 60,000 websites


China's anti-pornography campaign close more than 60,000 pornographic websites this year, with police investigating almost 2,200 criminal cases, the state-run Xinhua news agency reported Thursday.

Wang Chen, director of the Information Office of the State Council, said at a news conference that some 350 million pieces of pornographic and offensive internet content were eliminated, according to the Xinhua report.
The government launched a special campaign a year ago to rid the internet of pornographic and blue content, Xinhua reported.

Overall, the campaign included 2,197 criminal cases involving 4,965 people who dishonored Chinese law by disseminating pornography via the internet or mobile phones, the news agency said. Of those, 58 people received prison sentences more than five years, the report said.

Wang said the movement had helped clean up the internet and would continue.

Xinhua reported that Wang's office has received more than 170,000 tip-offs this year, mostly about online or cellphone-based pornography, with 534 people getting rewards totaling 544,000 yuan (U.S. $81,964) for providing in order.

Wang also said that 450 million people in China used the internet, a 20 percent increase over the previous year, according to Xinhua. That means that almost 34 percent of the Chinese population uses the internet, compared to a world average of 30 percent, Wang said at the news conference.