Sequel to a
previous section of my note on Internet Freedom/Censorship, here is a
presentation of the later part...
GERMAN GOVERNMENT STRUGGLING WITH A
'TWO-FACED' STANCE ON INTERNET FREEDOM
The German government wants
to protect Internet users in authoritarian countries from being monitored by
state authorities. But critics accuse the government of hypocrisy.
Tunisian
journalist and blogger Haythem el Mekki knows what he is talking about when he
speaks about Internet freedom. Living in Tunisia under Ben Ali, the country's
former dictator who was deposed during the Arab Spring, there was no freedom on
the Internet.
"They
hacked our accounts, deleted our pages. They tried to silence us for good on
the Internet," said el Mekki at a "Freedom Online Conference" in
Tunis.
El Mekki was
lucky to avoid prison - many of his friends and colleagues were less fortunate.
The Tyrant's
Virtual Eye
Following the
Arab Spring, the United States set up the "Freedom Online Coalition"
to which 19 countries belong.
Germany has
now officially joined the initiative. It primarily supports civil society and
Internet activists to protect the freedom of expression on the Internet.
Authoritarian
regimes are regularly criticized for controlling the flow of information on the
Internet. But the feeling is they have stopped doing this as crudely as the
Egyptian government did under Hosni Mubarak - it completely blocked Internet
traffic at the height of the Arab Spring protests.
Internet users are being subjected to more
surveillance - and some say we are careless with our online privacy
|
Governments
these days will use much more sophisticated methods to control the Net –instead
of shutting it down, they might use it to spy on their opponents.
The German
government's entry in the "Freedom Online Coalition" is an important
signal, says Annegret Bendiek from the German Institute for International and
Security Affairs (SWP).
"Part
of the government recognizes that non-state actors are using the Internet to
understand a range of opinions and to use this as a means of launching political
initiatives in authoritarian countries," Bendiek explains.
Bendiek says
Germany's membership of the coalition will send a signal to non-state actors
that they are being taken seriously and that they have a role.
Initiatives
launched by non-state actors may receive financial support. But they may also
need technical help, said Germany's Commissioner for Human Rights Markus Löning
on radio station, Deutschlandfunk.
He has
announced a roundtable discussion with German NGOs with expertise in Internet
freedom.
"It's
about answering questions like, How can I as a dissident, as a blogger, protect
myself from being tracked by the government? How should I set up my email
accounts? And how can I protect myself from government oppression?"
Long overdue
It may be a
good move, but some say Germany's membership of the Online Freedom Coalition is
long overdue.
"You
see it time and again that this debate tends to pop up when it's opportune and
it costs [the government] nothing," says Konstantin von Notz, a Greens
member of the German Bundestag, who is responsible for interior and Internet
policy.
Nothing ever
really gets down, adds von Notz, who believes the German government's stance on
the issue is two-faced.
Hmmm. Who's double-faceted in this topic for Nigerians?
Keep reading...
The West's
credibility problem
How credible
is anyone's commitment to Internet freedom when even Western secret service
agencies are monitoring our Internet traffic?
Greens Bundetag member von Notz thinks Germany is two-faced on Internet freedom |
During the
recent G8 summit, it was alleged that British authorities had monitored users'
Internet data. They had also listened in on phone calls – there's nothing new
in that.
But the
German Secret Service says it plans to expand the country's Internet
surveillance.
Add to this
the scandal over the American surveillance program, Prism, and von Notz says it
leaves the West looking rather ambiguous.
"It is
suspected that these various [security] services are unconstitutionally
collecting data in other countries and passing on this information, so that all
the domestic security authorities can benefit from it," says von Notz.
This may
make their commitment to Internet freedom seem absurd.
But the
Germany Ministry of Foreign Affairs says it's important to find the right
balance between security measures and the protection of people's privacy.
What that
balance is, is anyone's guess.
And there's
another credibility problem - the monitoring technology, which some
authoritarian states have been known to use, is supplied by developers from the
West, mainly Germany.
The German
Ministry of Economics and Technology has identified this as a growth market.
The export limits that apply to arms do not apply to these kinds of
technologies.
Awareness of
this contradiction is growing slowly, says SWP's Annegret Bendieck, and people
want to know: "What will this mean for our foreign policy and European
politics - if we don't want to be total hypocrites?"
Report Edited from German Report
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