China is rolling out new rules on religious activity on the Internet amid an ongoing crackdown on churches, mosques, and other institutions by the officially atheist Communist Party.
BEIJING — China is rolling out new rules on religious activity on the Internet amid an ongoing crackdown on churches, mosques, and other institutions by the officially atheist Communist Party.
Anyone wishing to provide religious instruction or similar services online must apply by name and be judged morally fit and politically reliable, according to draft regulations posted online late Monday by the State Administration for Religious Affairs.
Organizations and schools that receive licenses can operate only on their internal networks that require users to be registered and are barred from seeking converts or distributing texts or other religious materials, the rules said.
They also impose tight limits on what can be said or posted, including a ban on criticism of the party’s leadership and official religious policies, promoting religious participation by minors, and ‘‘using religion to . . . overthrow the socialist system.