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US cites Chinese internet filters as trade barrier

Censorship creates significant hurdle for businesses, annual report says, while avoiding mention of any response Washington might take

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A security guard points while walking past a display booth for Google at the Global Mobile Internet Conference in Beijing in a file photo from April, 2015. Sites like Google and Twitter are banned on the mainland. Photo: AP

The United States government has cited Chinese internet controls as a trade barrier in a report that comes as Beijing tries to block the mainland public from seeing news about the finances of Communist Party leaders’ families.

Mainland Chinese filters, which blocked access to websites including Google and social media such as Twitter, were a “significant burden” on businesses, the office of the US Trade Representative said in an annual report on trade conditions.

It gave no sign that Washington planned to take action, but highlighted the economic cost of the censorship, which is also criticised by human rights and pro-democracy groups.

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Washington is at odds with Beijing, which sees strict control over information as essential to protecting the party’s monopoly on power. Outright blocking of websites appears to have worsened over the past year, with eight of the top 25 most-trafficked global sites now blocked on mainland China.

Xi Jinping’s focus on shoring up power comes at the cost of reforms China urgently needs

Beijing restricts access to online materials by making traffic pass through state-controlled gateways linked to the global internet. Controls have tightened since President Xi Jinping became party leader in 2012.

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