Originally posted by the Voice of America. Voice of America content is produced by the Voice of America, a United States federal government-sponsored entity, and is in the public domain. Chinese Web Forum Asks 'Netizens' to Speak Up, but Not Too Loudly Kate Woodsome | Washington, DC 17 September 2010 Users of a cyber cafe in China surfing the Internet Photo: VOA China has the world's fastest growing Internet market, with nearly 400 million users online. Beijingâs Communist Party has launched a new online bulletin board for Chinese ânetizensâ to communicate directly with government leaders. In a country where free speech can be met with police action, the open forum appears to be a rare exercise in civic participation. But critics say the website is merely a facade of democracy masking Beijingâs modern efforts at social control. In the first weeks since its debut, the â[1]Direct Line to Zhongnanhaiâ has already published tens of thousands of comments from Chinese Internet users. Featuring color photos of President Hu Jintao, Premier Wen Jiabao and other leaders at the Zhongnanhai, or Communist Party headquarters, the Web bulletin invites citizens to say what they really think about the government. Common complaints, like corruption and housing, appear on the site. âThe housing prices are too high, peopleâs lives are difficult,â says one commentator. âI demand strict examination of corrupt officials and people and re-establish Chinese image,â says another. In some rare instances, there is a break in the norm. âTo carry out the One-Child Policy, you cannot force people to be sterilized. This is not humane.â Free speech? State-run media say the message board will help ease social tension by encouraging civic awareness and participation. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu recently told reporters in Beijing that the public has a right to express their opinions and suggestions freely online, as long as they are within the framework of laws and regulations. It is those regulations that worry free speech advocates, like the group [2]Human Rights in China. Executive director Sharon Hom says the website outlines 26 topics barred from online discussions. âYou canât post anything that endangers state security, that leaks state secrets, subverts state power, that damages national unity," says Hom. "So this freedom of expression can be exercised on this platform within these 26 prohibited content, which in the broader context of China has all been interpreted so broadly that it can include any content and all content.â State security Hom says the ever-changing interpretation of Chinaâs state security laws has allowed authorities to convict dissidents, journalists, lawyers and other citizens deemed too critical of the government. She points to the case of Liu Xiaobo, a rights activist jailed for contributing to âCharter 08,â a manifesto calling for political reform that has swept across the Internet, gaining even the support of some government officials. âLiu Xiaobo, whoâs serving a very long prison sentence for incitement to subvert state power, was precisely criticizing and engaged in the very activity that this site was supposed to be set up to do, that is criticize and monitor the government,â Hom says. The new Web forum is one of an increasing number of online meeting halls set up by the government in recent years. Jeremy Goldkorn, the editor of [3]Danwei.org, an independent website covering Chinaâs media, says these sites are part of the Communist Partyâs sophisticated communications strategy. âItâs sort of a publicity or a propaganda initiative on one hand. Itâs an attempt to show that they care about ordinary people and what ordinary people think," he says. "Itâs also a way for them to genuinely take the pulse of society and find out what social issues are problems.â Online chat, offline action Goldkorn says in some cases, online discussion has spurred the government to be more accountable offline. Last year, for example, Internet outcry over the arrest of Deng Yujiao, a young woman who stabbed a government official to death for allegedly assaulting her, led to a dramatic change in the homicide case. âThere was a big online reaction to this, where people were saying, âThis is completely unfair. She was going to be raped by a government official. It was self-defense.â And after the online fuss about it, she was released and was not convicted of this crime,â Goldkorn recalls. Goldkorn says the Internet alone is unlikely to spur broad political reforms, but it is changing the publicâs relationship to the government. âAlthough that platform is still more restricted than it is in the West, itâs vastly superior to anything thatâs ever happened really in China in terms of citizensâ ability to tell the government what theyâre thinking," he says. "So it has had the same kind of democratizing effect on the national debate as it has had in Western countries and in America.â However, Goldkorn says the new online debate is only allowed to address relatively innocuous topics already covered by state-run media. Anything else, he says, will be deleted. 50-cent army The online forums also are reportedly infiltrated by freelance writers working for the government. These writers post positive comments on websites from entertainment news to Internet games, much like this one on "Direct Line to Zhongnanhai:" âOpening this forum lets me see the hope of our country. My country and party will be robust.â [4]Thomas Crampton, with Ogilvy Public Relations' Asia-Pacific arm, says these freelancers are known as the â50-cent armyâ for the amount of money they reportedly earn for each post. âTheyâre trying to push the conversation in ways they think are more favorable to the government," he says. "So the government is getting involved in conversations and trying to shape the perception and the way the people are talking about issues.â Crampton says China also has its own versions of Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, because they are blocked inside the country. With these homemade platforms, he says, Beijing is building a mirror of the Internet to serve its own agenda. References 1. http://cpc.people.com.cn/GB/191862/191865/index.html 2. http://www.hrichina.org/public/index 3. http://danwei.org/ 4. http://thomascrampton.com/ .