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China appoints Xu as new Internet regulator

China yesterday appointed a new head of its powerful Internet regulator, a man who has publicly vowed to maintain the ruling Communist Party’s tight grip over cyberspace.
The Chinese government exercises widespread controls over the Internet and has sought to codify that policy in law.
Officials say such restrictions are needed to ensure security in the face of rising threats, such as terrorism.
In a brief report, the official Xinhua news agency said Lu Wei will no longer head the Cyberspace Administration of China, naming one of his deputies, Xu Lin, as his replacement.
Xu, 53, was in charge of propaganda in China’s commercial capital Shanghai from 2013-15 before being moved to Beijing to become a deputy to Lu, according to his biography.
Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post said Xu is regarded as a protege of President Xi Jinping.
The two men worked together when Xi was briefly Shanghai’s Communist Party chief in 2007.
In an article about Internet management for influential bimonthly party journal Qiushi in October, Xu pledged to uphold party leadership over the Internet and management of the media and public opinion “without any equivocation”.
“There can be no turning deaf ears to or ignoring wrong points of view on the internet, fantastic stories and theories, distortions of facts to create rumours or malicious attacks,” he wrote.
“I definitely don’t see this as a bullish thing for foreign Internet companies,” said Duncan Clark, chairman and managing director at BDA China, a Beijing-based investment consultancy.
Xinhua did not say where Lu would go next.
In China, it can often take weeks before subsequent public appointments are announced.
Xinhua also made no mention of Lu’s other title – head of the general office of the Central Leading Group for Internet Security, another body that oversees Internet policy.
Reuters was unable to reach either Lu or Xu for comment.
Lu worked his way up though Xinhua before becoming head of propaganda in Beijing and then moving on to internet work in 2013.
Known for his strong defence of government controls over the Internet, in December he rejected criticism ahead of a major state-sponsored Internet conference that China’s Internet was too censored, saying order was a means to online freedom.
Lu defended blocking some websites and censoring online posts, saying that if the government were being too restrictive, China’s online market would not be developing so rapidly.



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