Off the wire
Urgent: Suicide attack kills 6 foreign soldiers in Afghanistan  • Suspended FIFA President Blatter: I will fight  • Spanish home mortgages increase by 7.1 pct in Oct.  • Recast: 14 jailed over deadly Beijing construction site accident  • Spain's vehicles production rises by 13.5 pct in first 11 months of 2015  • Nearly 12,000 Slovaks apply for jobs at Jaguar Land Rover in Nitra  • Slovakia signs shareholder contract with Italian Enel  • China doctors conduct "animal-human" cornea transplant  • 1st LD: China's new draft law redefines term "terrorism"  • President Rouhani runs for Iran's Assembly of Experts elections  
You are here:   Home

2nd LD: China's new draft law redefines term "terrorism", regulates media coverage

Xinhua, December 21, 2015 Adjust font size:

Chinese lawmakers on Monday began reviewing draft legislation on the nation's first counterterrorism law.

The draft, tabled for a third reading at the ongoing bimonthly session of the National People's Congress (NPC) Standing Committee, is China's latest attempt to address terrorism at home and help maintain world security.

A statement from the NPC Standing Committee cited a note from the legislature's Law Committee, which called the draft law already "quite mature" and suggested it be put forward for approval.

One notable change in Monday's text is an updated definition of the term "terrorism."

According to the new draft, terrorism is defined as any proposition or activity -- that, by means of violence, sabotage or threat, generates social panic, undermines public security, infringes personal and property rights, and menaces government organs and international organizations -- with the aim to realize certain political and ideological purpose.

A previous version of the draft law, submitted in February, did not cover personal and property rights or political and ideological purpose.

"[China] opposes all extremism that seeks to instigate hatred, incite discrimination and advocate violence by distorting religious doctrines and other means, and acts to eradicate the ideological basis for terrorism," the new draft read.

In a separate clause, it said no institutions or individuals shall fabricate and disseminate information on forged terrorist incidents, report on or disseminate details of terrorist activities that might lead to imitation, nor publish scenes of cruelty and inhumanity in terrorist activities.

None, except news media with approval from counterterrorism authorities in charge of information distribution, shall report on or disseminate the personal details of on-scene workers, hostages or authorities' response activities.

The clause was specifically revised to restrict the distribution of terrorism-related information by individual users on social media, according to a statement from the NPC Standing Committee. Enditem