A prominent Chinese law professor had his social media account suspended, state media said today, after authorities vowed a renewed crackdown against "online rumours".
Several people have been arrested in recent weeks for posting material online on topics ranging from bird flu to mysterious deaths, but activists say that rumour charges are sometimes used to suppress political content.
He Bing, a professor at Beijing's University of Politics and Law, was blocked from posting further on China's Twitter-like Sina Weibo service "for deliberately spreading rumours", the official Xinhua news agency reported.
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China strictly controls content which could threaten the ruling Communist party, but it is unusual for weibo account suspensions and cancellations to be reported by state media.
He Bing could not be reached for comment by AFP Friday.
The professor is an outspoken figure with more than 400,000 weibo followers and recently posted a survey asking users to say whether China would descend into chaos if the authorities renounced Mao.
It was prompted by reports in state media that new President Xi Jinping had said repudiating the founding father of Communist China would lead to chaos.
The post -- which was still available today -- had more than 10,000 responses, with one reading: "Repudiating Mao would be the start of China's rejuvenation".
Mao remains part of the ruling party's pantheon but presided over a terrible famine in the 1950s and the chaotic Cultural Revolution.