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Interception of Communications Bill - Index of articles
Zim
set to launch Big Brother watch
Saturday
Argus (SA)
July 22, 2006
http://www.iol.co.za/html/news/zimbabwe/index.php
Times are hard
and getting harder in Zimbabwe, where people too proud to cry about
their troubles could soon find it too dangerous to joke about them.
Zimbabweans
faced with hunger, joblessness, the world's highest inflation rate
and shortages of every basic commodity ease their burden with jokes,
often spread by e-mail or cellphone text messages in a country where
laughter at the president's expense is a felony.
Parliament next
month will debate proposals to give the secret police extraordinary
powers to intercept, read or listen to the mail, email, telephone
or cellphone communications of any of its citizens without the approval
of any court.
The government
denies any sinister intent, saying the goal is to get its anti-terrorism
legislation in line with international practice.
But Zimbabwe
is not on the front lines of the war on terror, and government agents
could use the proposed powers to monitor the communications of the
political opposition, journalists and human rights activists who
have been critical of President Robert Mugabe.
Secret police
and intelligence agents could violate attorney-client privilege,
track financial transactions and negotiations and eavesdrop on the
private lives of anyone in the country.
Anytime a Zimbabwean visits a website, makes a deal or tells a joke,
Big Brother could be listening or watching.
"The purpose
of the bill
is to monitor and block communications for political reasons and
to use information they get to persecute opponents," said Lovemore
Madhuku, the chairperson of the National
Constitutional Assembly, a civil society group very critical
of repressive laws and actions of Mugabe's government.
"It is
part and parcel of the process of controlling dissent and stifling
democratic debate."
The government
contends the bill is part of a package of measures in the global
war on terrorism already enacted by other countries with little
or no opposition.
A similar law
was passed quietly in South Africa with the important difference
that a court must approve any interception. In Zimbabwe, that authority
would rest solely with Mugabe's minister of transport and communications.
With a package
of other security and media laws, Zimbabwe already has done away
with freedom of press and speech. People cannot legally protest
against the government, hold political rallies or meetings without
prior police approval. Clergymen have been arrested for holding
prayer vigils without prior police consent.
Jokes about
the president are no laughing matter to the government, which has
arrested people for insulting the president.
It is also illegal
to say or write something that can "falsely" bring the
government into disrepute.
"Jokes
about Mugabe are a crime," Jim Holland, the chief executive
of Mango, a Zimbabwean Internet service provider, said.
"But people
send these jokes all the time on cellphones or emails."
Holland believes
the real dangers lie in the government's ability to target its legitimate
opponents and monitor sensitive business and financial communications.
"It is troubling in a country like this with its record on
corruption that the government could monitor financial transactions
or even internal communications ahead of a company making a tender
offer," Holland said.
He said that
in early discussions about the proposed bill one man who would be
involved in any government monitoring effort told a gathering there
was no cause for concern because the proposed law was only a threat
"to criminals and human rights activists". - Sapa-AP
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