Chinese authorities on Friday blocked access inside the
country to the English and Chinese websites of The New York Times after
they published an article reporting that family members of Premier Wen
Jiabao had amassed a fortune worth billions of dollars.
Citing
corporate and regulatory records, The Times said it had pieced together
evidence showing that Wen's relatives have controlled assets worth at
least $2.7 billion, often hiding their names "behind layers of
partnerships and investment vehicles involving friends, work colleagues
and business partners."
China reacted angrily to the report,
preventing people inside the country from visiting the two Times
websites
or searching for the terms "New York Times" and "Wen Jiabao" on
popular social media platforms.
"It's trying to blacken China's
image and has ulterior motives," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong
Lei said in a response to a question about the article, which mentioned
Wen's son, daughter, younger brother and brother-in-law as being among
those who had grown rich during Wen's time in power.
Asked about
the decision to block the websites, Hong replied: "China regulates the
Internet in accordance with laws and regulations." The Chinese
government tries aggressively to control the flow information inside its
borders about sensitive topics like unrest in Tibetan areas and
criticism of senior officials.
It strictly manages the output of
domestic news media outlets and has a history of shutting off access to
international news websites. Chinese authorities have blacked out the
broadcast signal for international television stations like CNN and the
BBC when they have aired sensitive reports about the country.
The
Times story about Wen's family's wealth comes at a particularly
delicate time for the ruling Communist Party, only a matter of weeks
before the start of the 18th Party Congress, at which the country's next
set of top leaders will be announced.
Authorities have stepped
up security in Beijing, where the congress, part of a once-in-a-decade
leadership transition, will take place. This transfer of power has
already been complicated by the dramatic and damaging scandal involving
the former high-flying official Bo Xilai and his inner circle.
In
a country where official corruption is widespread, the top leadership
is particularly sensitive to suggestions that its members or those close
to them have become unusually wealthy. The growing divide between rich
and poor after two decades of torrid economic growth has added to that
defensiveness.
The Times article on the wealth of Wen's relatives
comes four months after Bloomberg News reported that the extended
family of Vice President Xi Jinping, the presumptive next top leader of
China, had accumulated business interests worth hundreds of millions of
dollars during his rise up the Communist Party ladder.
Chinese
authorities cut off access to the Bloomberg News website following
publication of the article, which was also based on public documents.
The
blocking of the Times websites Friday also takes place four months
after the introduction of the Chinese-language site, which the company
said at the time was "intended to draw readers from the country's
growing middle class" through a mixture of reporting by Chinese
journalists and Times articles translated from English.
The Times
cited a company spokeswoman as expressing disappointment Friday that
web access had been cut off. "We hope that full access is restored
shortly, and we will ask the Chinese authorities to ensure that our
readers in China can continue to enjoy New York Times journalism," said
Eileen Murphy, according to The Times.
"We will continue to report
and translate stories applying the same journalistic standards that are
upheld across The New York Times."
The servers that host both the
English and Chinese sites of the Times are outside mainland China,
according to the news organization.
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