It only opened around six months ago — and now comes word that Apple's iTunes Movies store in China is closed at least temporarily, along with its iBooks Store. The company has issued a statement saying that it hopes to reopen the movie and book services soon.
The closure was reportedly ordered by the Chinese government last week; according to local media, it comes just as a controversial Hong Kong film that's been censored in China is being released on Apple's
Hong Kong iTunes service
Chinese content regulator SAPPRFT — the State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television — ordered the Apple services shut down last week, according to
The New York Times
As NPR's Anthony Kuhn reports from Beijing, "China is a major source of revenue for Apple, but selling smartphones and computers in China is easier than movies and music, which is subject to government controls and censorship, and plagued by piracy."
News of the closure comes months after SAPPRFT banned the Hong Kong Film Awards show from being aired in China, and after Chinese news reports about the show had been stripped of any mention of the film that won,
The South China Morning Post
The newspaper notes that the film,
Ten Years
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