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Malaysia defends web filter plan | |||||
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The Malaysian government has defended the establishment of an internet filter, amid criticism it may be used to stifle politicial dissent in the country. A senior official with the National Security Council (NSC) confirmed reports that the coalition government was considering imposing controls - effectively scrapping a 1996 guarantee that it would not censor the internet. He told the AFP news agency on Friday: "We need to maintain racial harmony. We cannot have full-blown democracy like in the United States. "It is to keep out pornographic materials and bloggers who inflame racial sentiments. "This country must survive." Hundreds march He dismissed suggestions the proposal echoed China's aborted "Green Dam" project, aimed at introducing internet filtering software on all new computers sold in the country. The proposal comes after anti-government protests last week in which nearly 600 people marched on the streets of the capital Kuala Lumpur demanding an end to a controversial security law. An unnamed source told Reuters news agency: "They [the government] are looking to tweak the technical and legal details of implementing this internet filter, setting the stage for its implementation late this year or next year." The country's opposition has described the move as a "horror of horrors" that would destroy the relative freedom of the internet in Malaysia, where the mainstream press is tightly controlled. The memory of deadly racial racial riots in 1969 is still strong in Malaysia, and the need to preserve peace between majority Muslim Malays, and the minority ethnic Chinese and Indians, is commonly invoked by the government. Tight controls
They said it distorted fair market competition and could be used to tighten Beijing's grip on political dissent. | |||||
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Friday, 7 August 2009
:: Malaysia: Web filter plan
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