China Restores Access to S. Korea’s Largest Online Search Portal | Be Korea-savvy

China Restores Access to S. Korea’s Largest Online Search Portal


Access to Naver was partially shut down on June 4 in China, the day that marked the 30th year of the Tiananmen Square protests. (image: Korea Bizwire)

Access to Naver was partially shut down on June 4 in China, the day that marked the 30th year of the Tiananmen Square protests. (image: Korea Bizwire)

SEOUL, Jun. 18 (Korea Bizwire)Access to Naver, South Korea’s largest online search portal, was restored in major cities in China on Monday after being banned last Thursday.

The reasons behind the recovered access are currently unknown.

Beijing, Shanghai, and other major cities in China regained limited access to Naver Monday morning.

By noon, they gained full access to Naver news, dictionary, and search.

Access to Naver was partially shut down on June 4, the day that marked the 30th year of the Tiananmen Square protests, before shutting down fully last Thursday.

“The Chinese government may have temporarily allowed access to Naver for server maintenance purposes, or adhered to the criticism that its online censorship activities are just too much,” said local experts.

Unlike Naver, another major South Korean search portal, Daum, remains banned from the Chinese network since it was first shut down last January.

Beijing has been bolstering online censorship following the 30th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square protests and the Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests where more than 1 million protesters have gathered.

The South Korean government, in response, requested explanations and corrective measures from China.

Kevin Lee (kevinlee@koreabizwire.com)

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