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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Interception of Communications Bill - Index of articles
Internet
censorship on the rise?
Patrick
Burnett
Extracted from Pambazuka News 253
May 04, 2006
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/34001
As internet usage
in Africa grows, governments are beginning to wake up to the power of
the online medium to communicate, influence and organize. Already numerous
examples of internet censorship in the form of arrests and website blocking
can be found. This is likely to grow, says Patrick Burnett.
News last week was that Internet giant Yahoo! had been fingered in the
November 2003 imprisonment of Chinese cyber-dissident Jiang Lijun, who
was sentenced to four years for pro-democracy postings on the internet.
The company found itself in the hot seat after Reporters Without Borders
published documents it said proved that Yahoo! provided information that
led to the jailing. Lijun, 40, was sentenced for "subversion",
accused of seeking to use "violent means" to impose democracy.
It is the third time that Yahoo! has been implicated in collaborating
with the Chinese authorities in tracking down those who use the internet
to express divergent opinions, says the press freedom group.
Not that Yahoo! is alone. Microsoft and Google have also been accused
of assisting the Chinese government to enforce their censorship laws.
An enormous internet market of 111 million users combined with an official
intolerance for opposing views has led the Chinese to develop sophisticated
web monitoring and censoring systems. Web sites and blogs are frequently
blocked and internet searchers disrupted.
Compared to China, Africa has a tiny internet market of only 23 million
users, or 2-3 percent of the total population. As a result it has been
easy for governments to ignore the threat that the internet poses to them
in terms of its organizing potential and its ability to act as a vehicle
for diverse thoughts and opinions. The reality is that this is changing.
Regimes are likely to make greater use of internet censorship techniques
and crack down on those who use the internet to express contrary views.
Africa already has a poor record of press freedom and locking up of journalists.
This record is likely to be duplicated in cyber-space.
It’s no coincidence that Zimbabwe, which relies heavily on China for financial
and technical support, has drafted the Interception
of Communications Bill 2006, which seeks to empower the authorities
to intercept telephone, e-mail and cell phone messages. When the Bill
comes into force the government will establish a telecommunications agency
called the Monitoring and Interception of Communications Centre to monitor
mail, according to the Zimbabwe Independent (http://www.kubatana.net/html/archive/legisl/060324zimind.asp?sector=LEGISL).
The Bill will compel operators to install software and hardware to enable
them to intercept and store information as directed by the state. The
service providers will also be asked to link their message monitoring
equipment to the government agency. Failure to comply will result in a
fine or imprisonment.
While the Zimbabwean government has thus clearly recognised that control
of information extends to email and have plans to govern this area, examples
of direct internet censorship are already easy to find. In February, the
Ugandan government deployed filtering techniques against a Ugandan news
radio station's website. This was the first known case of internet censorship
in Uganda and came at a time when public debate was crucial - just before
presidential and parliamentary elections on 23 February. The blocking
was done by local Internet Service Providers, who effectively barred the
site’s internet identity number, known as an IP address. This method of
censorship meant that 700 other sites hosted by the same server were also
blocked, according to tests by Nart Villeneuve, head of research at Toronto
University. (http://ice.citizenlab.org/index.php?s=Uganda)
In Ethiopia, where up to 70 journalists are believed to be detained, Ethiopian
security forces on January 27 detained Frezer Negash, a correspondent
for the US-based Web site Ethiopian Review. The Committee to Protect Journalists
reported at the time that Ethiopian officials had cracked down on Negash
over her online writings, which were unfavourable to the government. Negash
was freed from custody on March 10 after a court ordered her release on
bail. (http://www.cpj.org/news/2006/africa/ethiopia30jan06na.html)
But the most sophisticated examples of internet censorship have emerged
from North Africa. The extent of the problem was starkly demonstrated
by the actions of the Tunisian government during the World Summit on the
Information Society (WSIS) in November 2005, when it was made clear that
any opinions outside what the Tunisian government deemed acceptable were
not to be tolerated. Online writers have been imprisoned and websites
are routinely blocked. According to a Human Rights Watch report, tests
conducted in 2005 found that Tunisia censors hundreds of websites. In
addition, Human Rights Watch reported that internet users believed the
government monitored email and internet traffic. Stiff laws were used
to detain online writers for expressing their opinions. In neighbouring
Libya, the government has blocked critical web sites based outside the
country and hacked a website critical of the government, Human Rights
Watch says. Egypt, reports Human Rights Watch, had detained people for
their activities online and used the internet to monitor and entrap homosexuals.
(http://hrw.org/reports/2005/mena1105/2.htm#_Toc119125694)
These examples show that some African governments, caught between a rock
and a hard place as liberalization of telecommunications opens up the
internet market to more users but at the same time reluctant to let go
of state controlled information channels, are beginning to wake up to
the threat the internet presents to maintaining the status quo. Crucially,
governments are not seeking to shut down the internet entirely and in
many cases have facilitated its growth, but what they are seeking to do
is to control the flow of information, in much the same way as traditional
media channels have been controlled. This presents dangers in that it
fosters an environment of self-censorship where citizens of a country
do not feel free to express their opinions online. Internet Service Providers,
fearful that they will face the wrath of the law, would rather remove
content that may be remotely offensive, thus abrogating censorship to
the private sector. This in itself can be profoundly unscientific. As
the Ugandan example demonstrates, by taking down a single internet site,
700 additional sites were inadvertently blocked.
If the above examples and trends are anything to go by, as the internet
spreads and new forms of expression such as blogging become more popular,
internet censorship is going to increase as governments realize the power
of the online medium. Control is likely to involve governments blocking
websites they deem undesirable, the arrest and persecution of those who
use the internet to express critical views and the introduction of laws
that allow government to control the internet, given that in many African
countries laws governing traditional media and forms of expression may
not extend to the internet. Internet censorship is likely to take place
with greater vigour in countries that already have poor freedom of expression
records. Unless a government has an entrenched respect for human rights
that extends to all areas of society, repression is likely to replicate
itself in the virtual environment of the internet.
Lastly, an enormous barrier to the benefits of the internet in Africa
lies in the fact that so few people have access – and that this is not
going to change in the near future, even though growth rates between 2000-2005
were over 400 percent. In this sense, it is the structural inequities
of the global economic order that censor tens of millions of people. As
a 2003 Privacy International (http://www.privacyinternational.org/article.shtml?cmd[347]=x-347-103801)
report noted:
"Thus, the solution to African Internet censorship lies as much in
finding global solutions to these problems, as it is about reinforcing
national and regional respect for freedom of expression on the medium
of the Internet."
* Patrick Burnett is online news editor, Pambazuka News
* Please send comments to editor@pambazuka.org
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