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Apple’s online music store, iTunes, has been blocked in China after more than 40 Olympic athletes downloaded a pro-Tibet album from the site.
Consumers in China began inundating Apple help forums on Monday, saying that they could not access iTunes. Earlier on the same day the US-based International Campaign for Tibet (ICT) announced that 46 athletes from America, Europe and even Beijing had used the site to download Songs for Tibet, which had been offered to them free.
The album, produced by the Art of Peace Foundation and promoted by the ICT, features 20 songs from highprofile artists including Sting, Moby, Damien Rice and Alanis Morissette.
It was put on iTunes on August 5, three days before the opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympics.
“We don’t know why the Chinese Government has blocked iTunes, but it seems the most logical explanation is that it is because of us,” Michael Wohl, the executive director of the Art of Peace Foundation, told The Times. “One side of my brain says it must be. The other side is just incredulous that our simple, non-violent action could have caused this.”
Kate Saunders, from the ICT, said however that the hostile reaction was entirely predictable after violent rioting in China’s Tibetan region in March and an Olympic torch relay dogged by international pro-Tibet protests.
“The album was released at a politically sensitive time,” Ms Saunders said. “We spread the word around the athletes before the Games that we were offering it to them for free.
“Certainly, we did intend the downloads to be a subtle form of protest for the athletes, as well as an act of solidarity for the Tibetan people.”
Athletes were encouraged to play the album on their iPods during their time in Beijing, in what the ICT called “a simple yet powerful symbol of personal freedom”. Ms Saunders said that the response from the athletes had been very positive. One unidentified athlete sent a message thanking the foundation for its “efforts, music and passion for peace”.
China.org.cn, a website run by the Chinese Government’s Information Office, reported that the country’s internet users were incensed by the album and were “rallying together to denounce Apple” and ban the singers and producers from the country.
The article said that some Chinese would boycott all Apple products, a potential blow for a company that opened its first shop in China one month ago in Beijing and wishes to set up many more. Steve Jobs, Apple’s chief executive and a practising Buddhist, is also negotiating with Chinese mobile phone operators to introduce the iPhone.
Mr Wohl insisted: “iTunes is just an innocent bystander. The album is being sold in hundreds of other stores. It would have been stranger if iTunes had not taken our album. Then that would have been a major political issue.”
The disappearance of iTunes behind the “Great Firewall” of China comes in the midst of the Beijing Olympics when the Government promised free and unfettered internet access for journalists. While it has lifted blocks on some sites, many are still inaccessible.
IT analysts said there was no doubt that the store had been blocked and that it was not merely experiencing a technical fault. Apple acknowledged that there was a problem but refused to comment. Yuna Huang, the company’s Beijing publicist, said: “We’ve seen the situation but can’t offer any more information.”
The censorship could backfire. Mr Wohl said that since the iTunes site had gone down many people in Beijing, including athletes, had asked for the album.
“Obviously there are a million different ways of getting an album to somebody,” he said.
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guys,imagine that,if some minority religionists want a territory of your country which has been part of your country for hundreds of years to be independent, will you support them? i think you are misled by your deep prejudice of China and our communist government. BUT WE CHINESE UNDERSTAND IT
feng guangyu, puyang, china
This is just another example of China's international image crisis. Seems they'd hoped the Olympics would give them some "street cred". Sorry to say though, the Olympics just put a thin veneer on China's image, one through which their political policies and tragic history can easily show through.
T-Mac, Detroit, MI., USA
After reading this article, I went and bought the album. We cannot allow the Chinese government to shut up everyone in the world that it disagrees with. How dare Beijing try to smother our freedom of expression!
JZ, Boston, USA
No surprise here. Two 79-year-old Chinese women were sentenced this week to one year of re-education by labor--in other words a death sentence.
Their crime? They PETITIONED the Chinese government to unfurl Free Tibet signs four times. Re-education via labor means a death sentence. Chines culture.
kboy, St. Louis, MO , USA
What do you expect from a totalitarian government, it will eventually cumble. A free Chnia is what the world should look forward to
Li, Beijing, China
What gets me about the censorship in China whether it be of iTunes, reporters, or the access to the oylmpic plazas is that China has not changed since the Olympics started. The world cannot change a countries culture through a world sporting event and to think it can is rather arrogant.
Dan Rodi, Colorado Springs, US
when i lived in nanchang, i experienced web site "outages" that weren't happening in other parts of the country. i found this out by asking friends in different places to try for themselves. they obviously have the ability to selectively control whatever area of the country they choose.
Josh, Dallas,
I'm blown away that APPLE Inc. would show such honorable resolve in the face of Yahoo's and Googles total capitulation to chinese authority over money. I don't have any reason to like apple besides this small oasis of human honorability that is normally absent when money talks among capitalists!
steve, newark ca., usa
The important issue here is not China blocking access to any particular website, but that it knew that THOSE 40 athletes were downloading THAT album. For those of you who celebrate the Chinese model, think about having to live under it.
Randy, Durham, NC, USA
"American commercial imperialism"
...also known as "freedom".
Scotty, Dallas, USA
Boycott which apple products? The bootleg ones or the real ones.
ben, Jenks, USA
I am living in China now. I am downloading stuff from iTunes at this very moment. Who says iTunes is blocked and what evidence do they have?
Jerome James Cole, Guangzhou, China
Apple's licensing model doesn't work in China anyway, since American commercial imperialism won't budge on the margins.
Also, Chinese people won't be signing up to iTunes Store anyway, since Apple blocks them due to content restrictions.
Yang, London, UK
Free Tibet? Hey, when's somone gonna "free" Hong Kong then? According to the Nanking Treaty 1842, Hong Kong was given up and was "possessed in perpetuity by Her Britannic Majesty". Whatever happened to THAT now, huh? Leave Tibet alone. It's part of China now.
Jamie Howlett, London, UK