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China to curb TV entertainment: Xinhua
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Oct 25, 2011


China will replace popular television entertainment with so-called "healthy" programming, state media reported on Tuesday, reflecting regulators' latest move to tighten media control.

The move by the State Administration of Radio Film and Television comes days after senior Communist Party leaders said cultural reforms were needed to balance the nation's increasingly speedy adoption of a market economy.

It also follows a SARFT edict in September forcing hit talent show "Super Girl" off the air after a six-year run.

Much like its US counterpart, "Super Girl" -- launched in 2004 -- proved an instant hit, attracting hundreds of millions of viewers, turning some of its contestants into celebrities, and attracting millions in advertising.

Under the order, SARFT said the nation's leading 34 satellite broadcasters would be barred next year from airing "excessive entertainment" and forced to show at least two hours of news each evening, the official Xinhua news agency said.

No evidence of the new order was found on the SARFT web site, but earlier this month, TV industry reports quoted SARFT publicity director Jin Delong as saying that the restrictions were expected to come into effect on January 1.

In September, SARFT posted a related directive offering "Advice on Strengthening Management of Satellite TV Channels."

The earlier guidance and Tuesday news reports said broadcasters would be encouraged to air programs promoting "harmony, health and mainstream culture."

China's provincial level satellite broadcasters, which official data show reach about 95 percent of the population of 1.3 billion, have in recent years been pushing to air more attractive shows as a means to sell advertising time.

Many of the broadcasters have emphasised edgy programming tailored to younger viewers, at once pressuring government mouthpiece China Central Television to up its game and attracting conservative critics' attention.

Analysts say this has triggered official concern and forced some of the racier programmes to tone down or be shut down.

In January, the southwestern megacity of Chongqing ordered its Chongqing Satellite Television channel to replace popular sitcoms with programming featuring Communist-era songs and classic revolutionary stories, state media said.

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China police detain Internet users
Beijing (AFP) Oct 25, 2011 - Chinese police have begun to detain and punish people for spreading rumours online, the government said Tuesday, as authorities intensify efforts to censor content on the Internet.

A university student in southwest China's Yunnan province was detained for disseminating fake information on a local murder, the State Internet Information Office said, while a man in Shanghai was taken into custody for 15 days for posting falsified tax documents online.

Police were also seeking the whereabouts of those responsible for posting false information found on three popular websites, the newly established office said in statement on government websites.

It did not detail what kind of information had been posted.

The moves come after Chinese authorities had vowed to crackdown on rumours and false information on the Internet.

China -- which has the world's largest online population with more than half a billion users -- constantly strives to control the Internet, blocking content it deems politically sensitive as part of a vast censorship system.

But the rise of China's weibos -- microblogs similar to Twitter, which is banned by the communist authorities -- has exposed the difficulty of controlling access to information.

Meanwhile more and more Chinese are turning to weibos to vent their anger over government corruption, scandals and disasters in a country where authorities maintain a tight grip on the media.

Tuesday's statement said that in the latest crackdown an editor at an Internet website had been warned for publishing a microblog entry concerning the recent crash of an air force fighter jet "without confirming the source and facts."

"Authorities will step up efforts to stop rumors and punish individuals and websites spreading rumors," the statement said.



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China's local election candidates campaign online
Beijing (AFP) Oct 24, 2011
When Yao Bo announced online that he was running in China's local elections, he joined dozens of candidates using the Internet to campaign for votes - a phenomenon that has spooked authorities. With more than half a billion Chinese now online, independent candidates are for the first time able to get their message to a broad audience of voters - the reason Yao says he decided to run for el ... read more


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