Iraq

  • Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Reuters Showcase

Price of Blood

Price of Blood

Gandhi blood sample up for auction in London.  Full Article 

Bangladesh Exclusive

Bangladesh Exclusive

Bangladesh factory banned by Wal-Mart still makes Wrangler shirts.  Full Article 

Religious Equality

Religious Equality

Threats daubed at Israeli woman prayer activist's home.  Full Article 

Terrorism Charges

Terrorism Charges

Britain denies bail to radical cleric who faces deportation.  Full Article 

Slowdown

Slowdown

Extreme global warming seen further away than previously thought.  Full Article 

Dagestan Bombing

Dagestan Bombing

Dagestan bombs kill 3, 2 dead in shootout near Moscow.  Full Article 

Reuters India Mobile

Reuters India Mobile

Get the latest news on the go. Visit Reuters India on your mobile device.  Full Coverage 

China bans physical punishment for Internet addicts

Related Topics

BEIJING | Thu Nov 5, 2009 11:56am IST

BEIJING (Reuters) - China's Ministry of Health has banned the use of physical punishment to wean teens off the net, months after a boy was beaten to death at an Internet boot camp.

Chinese parents have turned to more than 200 organisations offering treatment for Internet "disorders" as the government increasingly warns of unhealthy Internet habits among the young.

Many of the camps are imbued with a military atmosphere. Patients are forced to replace hours in front of the computer with arduous physical drills or even more extreme "treatments".

"When intervening to prevent improper use of the Internet, we should ... strictly prohibit restriction of personal freedom and physical punishments," the ministry said in a draft guideline for Internet use by minors, posted on its website (www.moh.gov.cn).

It appeared to have dropped the term "Internet addiction", widely used in earlier ministry documents, perhaps in a bid to calm worried parents who fuelled a mushrooming business of harsh camps to prevent teens from spending hours online.

The death of 15-year-old Deng Senshan, just hours after he checked into an Internet bootcamp in the southwestern Guangxi region in early August, caused a media storm in China.

Days later another teenager, Pu Liang, was taken to hospital with water in the lungs and kidney failure after a similar attack in Sichuan Province.

The government in July had already banned electro-shock therapy as a treatment for Internet addiction, after media reports about a controversial psychiatrist who administered electric currents to nearly 3,000 teenagers.

The latest guidelines suggest officials in Beijing do not think that those with unhealthy Internet habits should be forced offline permanently.

"The goal of intervention is ... to urge the target people to use the Internet in a healthy way," the guideline said. "It's not to stop them from using the Internet."

(Reporting by Yu Le and Emma Graham-Harrison; Editing by Ken Wills and Sugita Katyal)

Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.