China will continue to censor the internet during the
Olympic
Games, causing concern for the
20,000 members of the media who will be covering the event.
The state blocks access to a huge amount of web sites considered suspect, but
the International Olympic Committee had
previously said that bans would be lifted for the duration of the games – which
run from 8 August to 24 August.
Kevin Gosper, head of the IOC’s press commission, said yesterday: “I also
now understand that some IOC officials negotiated with the Chinese that some
sensitive sites would be blocked on the basis they were not considered
games-related.”
Jacques Rogge, head of the IOC, had told press service AFP earlier this
month: "There will be no censorship of the internet."
But many foreign media sites remain banned, including the BBC.
The Beijing Olympics organising committee insisted that media would have
sufficient access to do their jobs, but many journalists were worried they would
not be able to research, access web-hosted mail systems, and check their copy in
print online.
Press freedom group Reporters Without Borders recommended that foreign media
install programs that help circumvent firewalls and protect communications, such
as Tor, Psiphon or Proxify.
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