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(Xinhua Photo)
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BEIJING, Oct. 6 (Xinhua)--The Internet has been
extending fairly rapidly in China's rural areas, with the number of rural net
users reaching 37.41 million by the end of June, approximately 5.1 percent of
the total of rural population.
Statistics from the National Development and Reform
Commission (NDRC) show that at the same time urban netizens had reached 125
million, or 21.6 percent of urban population.
China's rural net users were 23.1 million at the end
of 2006, indicating that in six months 14.3 million farmers newly got access to
the Internet.
NDRC's report said the rapidly improving
telecommunications infrastructure in rural areas has obviously facilitated the
increase of net users. In its 11th Five-Year Program (2006-2010), the Ministry
of Information Industry vowed to extend phone service to every village and
enable every township to have access to Internet.
The main force of rural net users are young farmers
and migrant workers, who can use computers to enjoy on-line music, games and
videos as skillfully as urban users. However, rural net users rarely use the
Internet for news, on-line shopping, on-line banking and trading stocks.
In some rural areas, the Internet has been used for
special purposes featuring agricultural information and technologies and price
information of farm produce, among others.
Liu Manqiang, deputy director of the Information
Research Center under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said that
"information communication can bring about huge added value, an important goal
of the country's information drive is to enable more farmers to benefit from the
development of information industry."