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International
arrests of citizen bloggers more than triple
University of Washington News
June 10, 2008
Authoritarian regimes
around the world are dealing with troublesome citizen bloggers by
arresting them, and they're doing it more often, according to researchers
at the University of Washington.
"Last year, 2007,
was a record year for blogger arrests, with three times as many
as in 2006. Egypt, Iran and China are the most dangerous places
to blog about political life, accounting for more than half of all
arrests since blogging became big," said Phil Howard, an assistant
professor of communication. With his students, Howard prepared the
World Information Access Report, which documents sources and consequences
of social inequality in the information age.
In response to harassment,
a significant number of political bloggers are going underground.
They are blogging anonymously, and using other online tools such
as MySpace and YouTube to post critical commentary.
Since 2003, 64 citizens
unaffiliated with news organizations have been arrested for their
blogging. Topics of these blog posts vary, as do the kinds of criminal
charges and punishments.
But these arrests are
probably just the tip of the iceberg, Howard said.
"The real number
of arrested bloggers is probably much higher, since many arrests
in China, Zimbabwe, and Iran go unreported in the international
media."
Altogether around the
world, bloggers have served 940 months of jail time in the last
five years, the researchers found. During those years, the average
prison term for citizen journalists was 15 months. "Many countries
have political bloggers, and many persecute journalists," Howard
said. "More and more citizens are expressing themselves online,
and being punished for it."
Jail sentences varied
from blogger to blogger, the least amount a few hours and the longest
eight years. Nine of Egypt's 14 known blogger arrests occurred in
2007, an election year. In 2005, Iranian blogger Mojtaba Saminejad
was arrested for writing about the arrests of other bloggers.
"Some people
blog about their arrests as soon as they get out of jail,"
Howard said.
This information likely
reflects the growing number of citizens who blog, but also growing
recognition among authoritarian governments that citizen bloggers
cause problems, Howard said. By targeting nonprofessional journalists
who express themselves online, authoritarian governments can promote
fear among their Internet users, Howard said.
These bloggers expose
bureaucratic corruption or human rights abuses, and express opinions
about political figures and public policy. They post reports and
photos from social protests. They write about political art or share
images and writing that according to their governments violate cultural
norms.
In democratic countries
such as England and the U.S., blogger arrests often involve people
accused of posting pornography or inciting racial hatred online.
But even the most democratic countries have cases where bloggers
were arrested for activities many would consider free speech. For
example, Canadian Charles Leblanc was arrested for photographing
a protest for his blog.
Howard's team studied
news reports in major print, television, radio and online media
outlets. Some arrests were reported only online in specialized news
sources, and these were double- checked for accuracy. The compiled
list of incident reports was then coded for variables such as length
of arrest or amount of fine, official charges (if any) and the type
of blogging for which the offender had been arrested.
Researchers
looked for incidents involving people unaffiliated with a news organization
who were arrested for posting content to their blogs.
The World Information Access team also reviewed trends in the global
digital divide. They downloaded Web sites for 356 political parties
in the Muslim world, and found ideological content to be surprisingly
mainstream: Traditional liberal and conservative political parties
have the largest volume of gigabytes of content, and the most Web
pages.
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