Want China Times, Xinhua 2014-05-27
A government report on China's human rights said Monday that internet has "dramatically" expanded the space of freedom of speech.
| A smartphone user in a subway train in Beijing. (File photo/Xinhua) |
A government report on China's human rights said Monday that internet has "dramatically" expanded the space of freedom of speech.
Chinese
netizens post and forward 250 million microblog messages and over 20 billion
WeChat and other instant messages every day, said the report on China's human
rights in 2013, issued by the State Council Information Office.
Internet
has become one of the most important channels for the public to express its
opinion, the report said.
"Chinese
people enjoy extensive freedom of speech," the report said. "Within
the range allowed by the Constitution and other laws, the public can discuss
political issues freely."
The public
can express opinions through internet forums, blogs, personal webpages, social
networks, online literature, online videos and other Internet platforms,
according to the report.
The report
quoted the statistics from seven websites including Sina and Tencent as saying
that, among the 20 topics that received the most attention online in 2013, the
top 12 received over 2 million posts each, and the top one over 45 million
posts.
Chinese
netizens discussed a wide range of topics, including lawsuits, people's
livelihood, individual rights and interests protection, doctor-patient
disputes, and corruption, the report said.
By the end
of 2013, the number of netizens in China reached 618 million and Internet
coverage rate 45.8 percent, according to the report.
The country
now has about 120 million Internet forum or bulletin board system (BBS) users,
437 million blog and personal webpage users and 278 million social network
users.
Effective
realization of freedom of speech ensures that the public oversee the
government, the report said.
Many local
government websites in China have mailboxes to receive letters from the public,
while the central discipline inspection agency, Supreme People's Court and
Supreme People's Procuratorate have opened tip-off websites.
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