China’s Guizhou province, where Apple has set up its first data center in the country, plans to create a working committee chaired by communist party members to oversee the US company’s iCloud facility. China has started to police the Internet more closely and introduced a new cyber security law on June 1 that imposes tougher controls over data than in Europe and the United States, including mandating that companies store all data within China and pass security reviews, according to Reuters. The Guizhou government said on its website that the Apple iCloud working committee would be made up of around 10 members, such as Guizhou’s Executive Vice Governor Qin Rupei, Deputy Secretary-general Ma Ningyu and other officials. “The provincial government has decided to form a development and coordination working committee to quicken the setting up of Apple’s iCloud project,” it said in a Chinese language statement. An Apple spokeswoman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.