The Internet on probation: Anti-terrorism drive threatens Internet freedoms worldwide



5.09.2002 - Since the mid-1990s, a number of governments and international 
institutions have sought to control the Internet through laws and 
regulations. They have been quite successful. The campaign against 
terrorism and the security excesses it produces have speeded up the trend. 
One year after the tragic events in New York and Washington, the Internet 
can be added to the list of "collateral damage" caused by the general spate 
of security measures. As a result, basic cyber-freedoms have been cut back. 
A report by Reporters without borders.

Reporters Without Borders warned today that security "abuses" by the 
world's governments in the year since the 11 September attacks in the 
United States have increasingly put the Internet under the control of 
security services.

"Basic Internet freedoms have clearly been cut back," said the organisation's
secretary-general, Robert Ménard, and the Internet can be put on the list 
of the "collateral damage" caused by the "tragic events" in New York and 
Washington and the drive for tighter security. Many governments had also 
used the pretext of the anti-terrorism drive to curb basic freedoms or 
crack down on their domestic opponents using the Internet.

Robert Ménard spoke as Reporters Without Borders published a report, The 
Internet on Probation, detailing the concerted attacks on Internet freedoms 
around the world over the past year.

He said the situation was especially disturbing because, apart from 
countries (such as China, Vietnam, Saudi Arabia and Tunisia) traditionally 
hostile to human rights and freedom of expression that had used the 
situation to step up repression, Western democracies were now posing a "new 
threat" to citizens' freedoms with an arsenal of new security measures.

The report said many countries had introduced facilities for general 
retention of data about people's e-mail traffic and Internet activity, 
turning Internet service providers (ISPs) and telecommunications companies 
into "a potential arm of the police." "Access to this mass of information 
is being given with alarming ease to police and intelligence services," it 
said. "This unprecedented abuse means all citizens are theoretically under 
suspicion."

The report cites the major steps taken in the drive against Internet 
freedoms over the past year. These include UN Security Council Resolution 
1373 on fighting terrorism, the USA Patriot Act passed by the US Congress 
and various orders of President George Bush, the amendment of the European 
Union's rules on protection of electronic data, various other laws passed 
by parliaments around the world and the recommendations of the G8 nations 
and the European police body, Europol.

"The United States, Britain, France, Germany, Spain, Italy, Denmark, the 
European Parliament, the Council of Europe and the G8 nations have all 
challenged cyber-freedoms over the past year," said Ménard. "Yet these are 
countries with deep-rooted secular and democratic traditions whose citizens 
fought long and hard to win their right to free expression, the 
confidentiality of mail and the right of journalists not to reveal their 
sources."

"What would the citizens of Europe and elsewhere do," asked Ménard, "if 
they were told a law had been passed allowing what they sent through the 
post to be routinely read by the police at any time ? They would be 
outraged at such restrictions on their freedom.

"Yet these are exactly the kind of measures that have been taken or are 
being taken concerning the Internet. We need to be much more vigilant."

Download the report in PDF format: http://www.rsf.org/IMG/pdf/doc-1259.pdf 
(130 K)


--
Vincent Brossel
Asia - Pacific Desk
Reporters Sans Frontières
5 rue Geoffroy Marie
75009 Paris
33 1 44 83 84 70
33 1 45 23 11 51 (fax)
asia@rsf.org
www.rsf.org




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