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China blocks access to whistle-blower site

Last Updated 03 May 2018, 04:51 IST

 Wikileaks.org and cablegate.wikileaks.org were totally blocked and could not be accessed even through some of the free proxy servers, underlining the extent of control the government exercises in China, which has the largest network base of over 420 million internet users.

China routinely blocks access to a large content, including information relating to Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama, websites run by Tibetan activists as well as dissidents through a network of firewalls.

There was not much in the print and electronic media here during the past few days over the 2.5 lakh documents leaked by the whistle-blower website, except for a denial in the state- run China Daly by official analysts of the claims contained in the secret cables that the politburo of the ruling CPC authorised hacking of Google to make it fall in line with the official controls.

Meanwhile, the Wikileaks disclosures containing some of the US embassy memos here contained frank and candid assessment by Chinese officials of acts of North Korea, Beijing’s closest ally, with one of them describing Pyongyang as a “spoilt child” for attempting to win the US attention with a provocative missile test.

A February 2010 cable quoted a South Korean official as saying that China “would be comfortable with a reunified Korea controlled by Seoul (South Korea) and anchored to the United States in a ‘benign alliance’ — as long as Korea was not hostile towards China.”

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(Published 01 December 2010, 17:05 IST)

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