Washington -- The Chinese government uses the Internet as a tool of
repression to crush dissent and monitor usage, says Congressman Christopher
Smith, chairman of the House International Relations Subcommittee on Africa,
Global Human Rights and International Operations.
Smith, a Republican from New Jersey, made the remark in an opening statement at
a February 15 hearing on "The Internet in China: A Tool for Freedom or
Suppression?"
"[T]wo of the most essential pillars that prop up totalitarian regimes are
the secret police and propaganda," Smith said. "Yet for the sake of
market share and profits, leading U.S. companies like Google, Yahoo, Cisco and
Microsoft have compromised both the integrity of their product and their duties
as responsible corporate citizens. They have aided and abetted the Chinese
regime to prop up both of these pillars, propagating the message of the
dictatorship unabated and supporting the secret police in a myriad of
ways, including surveillance and invasion of privacy, in order to effectuate the
massive crackdown on its citizens."
The Chinese government has detained 49 "cyber dissidents" and 32
journalists for posting information on the Internet critical of the regime,
according to Smith.
Smith voiced concerns over U.S. technology companies collaborating with China to
"decapitate the voice of dissidents," citing U.S.-based Yahoo's
cooperation with Chinese security officials, which led to the imprisonment of
dissident Shi Tao.
"Women and men are going to the gulag and being tortured as a direct result
of information handed over to Chinese officials," Smith said.
The Chinese government utilizes the technology of U.S. information technology
(IT) companies, combined with human censors, to control information in China, he
said.
"Websites that provide the Chinese people news about their country and the
world such as BBC as well as the Voice of America and Radio Free Asia are
regularly blocked by China," Smith said. U.S.-based Cisco
Corporation, he said, has provided China with the technology necessary to filter
Internet content through its software.
The congressman also cited Microsoft for shutting down the web-log, or blog, of
Chinese journalist Zhao Jing in December 2005 at the request of the Chinese
government.
Smith said he was encouraged by efforts by U.S. companies to develop
anti-censorship technology that will enable Chinese citizens to access the
entire Internet filter-free and detect monitoring by Chinese officials.
Following is the text of Smith's statement:
Committee on International Relations
U.S. House of Representatives
Subcommittee on Africa, Global Human Rights and International Operations
Congressman Christopher Smith Statement for Hearing on "The Internet in
China: A Tool for Freedom or Suppression?"
February 15, 2006
Good morning and welcome to this hearing on the Internet in China. We are here
to examine a problem that is deeply troubling to me, and I believe, to the
American people: that American technology and know-how is substantially enabling
repressive regimes in China and elsewhere in the world to cruelly exploit and
abuse their own citizens.
Over the years, I have held 25 hearings on human rights abuses in China, and
while China's economy has improved somewhat, the human rights situation remains
abysmal.
So-called economic reform has utterly failed to result in the protection of
freedom of speech, expression, or assembly. The Laogai system of forced labor
camps is still full with an estimated 6 million people; the Chinese government
permits a horrifying trade in human organs; the PRC's draconian
one-child-per-couple policy has made brothers and sisters illegal and coerced
abortion commonplace; and political and religious dissidents are systematically
persecuted and tortured.
Similarly, while the Internet has opened up commercial opportunities and
provided access to vast amounts of information for people the world over, the
Internet has also become a malicious tool: a cyber sledgehammer of repression of
the government of China. As soon as the promise of the Internet began to be
fulfilled - when brave Chinese began to email each other and others about human
rights issues and corruption by government leaders - the Party cracked down. To
date, an estimated 49 cyber-dissidents
and 32 journalists have been imprisoned by the PRC for merely posting
information on the Internet critical of the regime. And that's likely to be only
the tip of the iceberg.
Tragically, history shows us that American companies and their subsidiaries have
provided the technology to crush human rights in the past. Edwin Black's book, IBM
and the Holocaust reveals the dark story of IBM's strategic alliance with
Nazi Germany.
Thanks to IBM's enabling technologies, from programs for identification and
cataloging to the use of IBM's punch card technology, Hitler and the Third Reich
were able to automate the genocide of the Jews.
U.S. technology companies today are engaged in a similar sickening
collaboration, decapitating the voice of the dissidents. In 2005, Yahoo's
cooperation with Chinese secret police led to the imprisonment of the
cyber-dissident Shi Tao. And this was not the first time. According to Reporters
Without Borders, Yahoo also handed over data to Chinese
authorities on another of its users, Li Zhi . Li Zhi was sentenced on December
10, 2003 to eight years in prison for "inciting subversion." His
"crime" was to criticize in online discussion groups and articles the
well-known corruption of local officials.
Women and men are going to the gulag and being tortured as a direct result of
information handed over to Chinese officials. When Yahoo was asked to explain
its actions, Yahoo said that it must adhere to local laws in all countries where
it operates.
But my response to that is: if the secret police a half century ago asked where
Anne Frank was hiding, would the correct answer be to hand over the information
in order to comply with local laws? These are not victimless crimes. We must
stand with the oppressed, not the oppressors.
I was recently on a news show talking about Google and China. The question was
asked, "Should it be business' concern to promote democracy in foreign
nations?" That's not necessarily the right question. The more appropriate
question today is, "Should business enable the continuation of repressive
dictatorships by partnering with a corrupt and cruel secret police and by
cooperating with laws that violate basic human rights?"
I believe that two of the most essential pillars that prop up totalitarian
regimes are the secret police and propaganda. Yet for the sake of market share
and profits, leading U.S. companies like Google, Yahoo, Cisco and Microsoft have
compromised both the integrity of their product and their duties as responsible
corporate citizens. They have aided and abetted the Chinese regime to prop up
both of these pillars, propagating the message of the dictatorship unabated and
supporting the secret police in a myriad of
ways, including surveillance and invasion of privacy, in order to effectuate the
massive crackdown on its citizens.
Through an approach that monitors, filters, and blocks content with the use of
technology and human monitors, the Chinese people have little access to
uncensored information about any political or human rights topic, unless of
course, Big Brother wants them to see it. Google.cn, China's search engine, is
guaranteed to take you to the virtual land of deceit, disinformation and the big
lie. As such, the Chinese government utilizes the technology of U.S. IT
companies combined with human censors - led by an estimated force of 30,000
cyber police - to control information in China. Websites that provide
the Chinese people news about their country and the world, such as BBC, much of
CNN, as well as Voice of America and Radio Free Asia, are regularly blocked in
China. In addition, when a user enters a forbidden word, such as
"democracy," "China torture" or "Falun Gong," the
search results are blocked, or you are redirected to a misleading site, and the
user's computer can be frozen for unspecified periods of time.
Cisco has provided the Chinese government with the technology necessary to
filter Internet content through its creation of Policenet, one of the tools the
regime uses to control the Internet. Cisco holds 60 percent of the Chinese
market for routers, switches, and other sophisticated networking gear, and its
estimated revenue from China, according to Derek Bambauer of Legal Affairs, is
estimated to be $500 million annually. Yet Cisco has also done little creative
thinking to try to minimize the likelihood that its products will be used
repressively, such as limiting eavesdropping abilities to specific computer
addresses.
Similarly, Google censors what are euphemistically called "politically
sensitive" terms, such as "democracy," "China human
rights," "China torture" and the like on its new Chinese search
site, Google.cn. Let's take a look at what this means in practice. A search for
terms such as "Tiananmen Square" produces two very different results.
The one from Google.cn shows a picture of a smiling couple, but the results from
Google.com show scores of photos depicting the mayhem and brutality of the 1989
Tiananmen Square massacre. Another example: let's look at "China and
torture." Google has said that
some information is better than nothing. But in this case, the limited
information displayed amounts to disinformation. A half-truth is not the truth -
it is a lie. And a lie is worse than nothing. It is hard not to draw the
conclusion that Google has seriously compromised its "Don't Be Evil"
policy. It has become evil's accomplice.
Not surprisingly, Americans, not just Chinese, are also the victims of this
censorship. On an informal request from the Chinese government, Microsoft on
December 30, 2005 shut down the blog of Zhao Jing because the content of Zhao's
blog on MSN Spaces was offensive to the PRC. Zhao had tried to organize a
walk-off of journalists at the Beijing News after their editor was fired for
reporting on clashes between Chinese citizens and police in southern China.
However, Microsoft shut down the blog not only in China, but
everywhere. It not only censored Chinese access to information, but American
access to information, a step it has only recently pulled back from. Like Yahoo,
MSN defended its decision by asserting that MSN is committed to complying with
"local laws, norms, and industry practices in China." Regrettably, I
haven't been able to find an MSN statement on its commitment to global laws,
norms, and industry practices protecting human rights in China.
Standing for human rights has never been easy or without cost. It seems that
companies have always resisted having to abide by ethical standards, yet we have
seen the success of such agreements as the Sullivan principles in South Africa
and MacBride principles in Northern Ireland. I, and many of my colleagues on
both sides of the aisle, would welcome leadership by the corporations to develop
a code of conduct, which would spell out how they could operate in China and
other repressive countries while not harming
citizens and respecting human rights. But I believe our government also has a
major role to play in this critical area, and that a more comprehensive
framework is needed to protect and promote human rights. This is why I intend to
introduce The Global Online Freedom Act of 2006 in the coming week to promote
freedom of expression on the Internet.
There are some encouraging and innovative public and private efforts already
underway in this area. Electronic Frontier Foundation, for instance, allows
Windows based computers to become proxies for Internet users, circumventing
local Internet restrictions. Through the efforts of the U.S. Broadcasting Board
of Governors' fund of a mere $100,000, VOA and Radio Free Asia's websites are
accessible to Chinese Internet users through proxy servers because of the
technology of Dynaweb and UltraReach.
Earlier this month, the technology firm Anonymizer announced that it is
developing a new anti-censorship technology that will enable Chinese citizens to
safely access the entire Internet filter-free. The solution will provide a
regularly changing URL so that users can likely access the uncensored Internet.
In addition, users' identities are apparently protected from online monitoring
by the Chinese regime. Lance Cottrell of Anonymizer said it "is not willing
to sit idly by while the freedom of the Internet is
slowly crushed. We take pride in the fact that our online privacy and security
solutions provide access to global information for those under the thumb of
repressive regimes."
In conclusion, I hope this hearing might be the beginning of a different sort of
dialogue - a discussion on how American high-tech firms can partner with the
U.S. government and human rights activists to bring down the Great Firewall of
China, and on how America's greatest software engineers can use their
intelligence to create innovative new products to protect dissidents and promote
human rights.
[...]
(Distributed by the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State.)