A top microblog in China has blocked searches for the Chinese words for "Hillary Clinton" and "Hillary", just a day after the U.S. Secretary of State gave a speech urging governments to end Internet censorship.
China's Sina microblog, a Twitter-like service, appeared to be blocking the terms on Thursday morning. "In accordance with the relevant laws, regulations and policies, the search result did not display," said the response on the microblogging site. In China, government censors routinely force local websites to remove politically sensitive content.
Clinton had given a speech earlier this week saying countries such as China would face long-term economic and social costs that would lead to civil unrest if their censorship of the Internet continued.
The U.S. Embassy in Beijing tried to start discussions about the speech using Chinese microblogs. But it appears that the posts were quickly taken down by Chinese government censors.
The embassy referred to a statement made by U.S. Ambassador to China Jon Huntsman that said, "We are disappointed that some Chinese Internet sites have decided to remove discussion of Secretary Clinton's Internet freedom speech from their websites. It is ironic that the Chinese are blocking an online discussion about Internet freedom."
The Hillary-censoring comes just weeks after Sina and other microblogs in China also began censoring searches for the Chinese word "Egypt" following the anti-government protests in the Middle Eastern country.
China has been restrictive on news and information released on the politically sensitive topic, in order to prevent the same kind of civil unrest from occurring in the country, said Phelim Kine, an Asia researcher for New York-based Human Rights Watch.
"They are working diligently to ensure new types of technology are neutered and controlled," Kine said. "The Chinese government is gambling by keeping a tight lid on control and keeping a facade of harmony, believing that this will translate and continue it's long-term control."