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Shutting off Internet cafes is not
good governance
By Li Xing
Email: lixing@chinadaily.com.cn
A letter arrived on the desk of the Party secretary of Fangxian County,
in North China's Shanxi Province, on March 8 of this year.
In the letter, a teenager pleaded for the county to do something about
the Internet cafes in the county seat, which he said were doing
irrevocable harm to primary and middle school students like him.
The letter set off a chain of government actions that led to the closure
of every Internet cafe in the county's town centre by late May. There
are now only two Internet cafes in the whole county, with an area of
1,434 square kilometres and a population of about 140,000.
According to a media report, these actions have won kudos from many
local people for almost successfully sending the "game-addicted"
teenagers back to school. Some students have shown improvement in their
academic performances.
Fangxian, an obscure mountainous area, has thus risen to national fame.
In fact, more than 200 netizens left comments on the message board
available on the county's government's website, www.sxfangshan.gov.cn.
The applause for the county's actions seemed louder than the criticism.
Some said the Internet has little good to offer young people, especially
those in schools. One even goes as far as suggesting other places should
follow Fangxian's example.
However, as an avid netizen who considers the Internet indispensable
from work and daily life, I don't believe shutting down all the Internet
cafes in town is a way of executing good governance, because the county
has failed to find more effective ways to ensure that local Internet
cafes operate within legal boundaries.
By ending the businesses of all Internet cafes, the county has closed
the open window to knowledge and the outside world for those local
residents above the age of 18 who cannot afford to buy a computer and
purchase an ADSL or dial-up scheme to go online.
In fact, people above age 18 make up the bulk of Internet users in
China. According to the China Internet Network Information Centre,
people between the ages of 18 and 30 accounted for 57.3 per cent of
China's 123 million Internet users by this July, and 58.6 per cent of
Internet users earned below 1,500 yuan (US$188) a month.
Despite the problems associated with online gaming and other unhealthy
contents online, the Internet offers a far greater wealth of information
and knowledge than it does garbage. That's why it has grown so rapidly
and ever more closely linked people of the world.
Among Chinese netizens, some 82 per cent say their first source of news
and information is the Internet. Meanwhile, more than 60 per cent go
online to keep in touch with their friends, and over 40 per cent log on
to chat with their friends and for instant messaging.
Only 32 per cent of netizens say they also play games on the Internet.
Rather than banning Internet cafes, governments at all levels should
explore better management schemes. In fact, across the country, quite a
few cities have been establishing new models to offer free Internet
access and learning to students as well as other young people in
schools, publicly funded libraries or other establishments.
Internet cafes are better scrutinized and run by law, so that no
students under the age of 18 are allowed to enter. Time limits are set
for online gaming.
For other places to follow in the footsteps of Fangxian is just
unimaginable. If that happened, about 42 million Chinese would have no
place to go online, as some 29.5 per cent of Chinese netizens access the
Internet at such cafes.
I don't think we'd like to see so many of them have to be content like
toads sitting in the well without being able to follow what else is
going on above the ground.
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