[Infowarrior] - Internet censorship spreading: OSCE study

Richard Forno rforno at infowarrior.org
Sun Jul 29 02:16:10 UTC 2007


Internet censorship spreading: OSCE study
Fri Jul 27, 2007 11:14AM EDT
http://www.reuters.com/article/technologyNews/idUSL2774335120070727?feedType
=RSS&rpc=22&sp=true

VIENNA (Reuters) - State restrictions on use of the Internet have spread to
more than 20 countries that use catch-all and contradictory rules to help
keep people off line and stifle feared political opposition, a new report
says.

In "Governing the Internet", the Organisation for Security and Cooperation
in Europe (OSCE) presented case studies of Web censorship in Kazakhstan and
Georgia and referred to similar findings in nations from China to Iran,
Sudan and Belarus.

"Recent moves against free speech on the Internet in a number of countries
have provided a bitter reminder of the ease with which some regimes,
democracies and dictatorships alike, seek to suppress speech that they
disapprove of, dislike, or simply fear," the report by the 56-nation OSCE
said.

"Speaking out has never been easier than on the Web. Yet at the same time,
we are witnessing the spread of Internet censorship," the 212-page report
said.

In a new case not covered by the report, a senior Malaysian minister vowed
this week to apply law prescribing jail terms for Web writers of comments
said to disparage Islam or the king.

Malaysian police grilled one on-line author over postings the ruling party
described as an attack on the country's state religion and a bid to stir
racial tension.

In Kazakhstan, rules on Internet use are so vague and politicized that they
"allow for any interpretation ..., easily triggering Soviet-style 'spy
mania'" where any dissident individual or organisation could be branded a
threat to national well-being and silenced, according to the OSCE report.

It cited a prominent incident in 2005 when Kazakhstan seized all .kz
Internet domains and closed one deemed offensive and run by British satirist
Sacha Baron Cohen, who had made the acclaimed spoof film "Borat: Cultural
Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan".

In a speech to the OSCE parliament on Thursday, Kazakh Information Minister
Yermukhamet Yertysbayev insisted Kazakhstan was determined to build
democracy and create an "e-government" expanding Internet service and making
"our media more free, contemporary and independent".

The OSCE report said Kazakhstan's state monopoly on Internet providers
tended to deter use by making prices for all but very slow and limited
dial-up service far higher than those for West Europeans even though Kazakh
incomes are much lower.

Georgian law contained "contradictory and ill-defined" provisions which
might "give leverage for illegitimate limitation" of free expression on the
Internet, the report said.

© Reuters 2007. All rights reserved. 




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