China to ban foreign cartoons in prime hours   (Xinhua)  Updated: 2006-08-13 15:49  
From September 1, Chinese children will be able to watch domestic cartoon 
programs during 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. every day, according to a regulation by China's 
TV watchdog. 
 The State Administration of Radio, Film and Television (SARFT) has decided to 
ban all foreign cartoons during the "golden hours", reported the Beijing News on 
Sunday. 
 No foreign cartoons or programs of introducing foreign cartoons can be shown 
during the period on all domestic cartoon channels and children channels, the 
regulation says. 
 Only after 8 p.m. can foreign cartoons appear on TV, it requires. 
 The regulation has been issued to local TV stations but the administration 
has not made it public, according to the newspaper. 
 Cartoon programs co-produced by domestic and foreign producers will have to 
get approval from SARFT to show during 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. from September 1. 
 The first foreign cartoon introduced to China was a Japanese cartoon called 
"Astro Boy" in 1981. Since then, a large quantity of foreign cartoons crammed 
into China. 
 In 2000, a regulation by the SARFT required local TV stations get approval 
from the administration and set quotas for imported cartoons to show on TV. By 
that time, China's cartoon programs had nearly been monopolized by Japanese 
cartoons. 
 In 2004, the SARFT issued another regulation, requesting for at least 60 
percent of cartoon programs aired in a quarter to be domestic products. The 
regulation resulted in a sharp decrease of foreign cartoons on local 
TV.  
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