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  • Raging Against Rising Internet Repression

    The Nation
    July 21, 2008

    Raging Against Rising Internet Repression
    By Antony Loewenstein

    During the Global Voices Citizen Media Summit 2008--sponsored by
    Harvard University and Google in Budapest, Hungary, in late June, and
    attended by over 200 bloggers, human rights activists, writers,
    journalists, hackers and IT experts from every corner of the
    globe--one participant joked that it was worthwhile buying domain
    names for dissidents likely to be imprisoned. "Just get them with
    'Free (insert name here).com,'?" he said.

    A recent University of Washington report found that 64 people have
    been arrested for blogging their political views since 2003. Three
    times as many people were arrested for blogging about political issues
    in 2007 than in 2006. More than half of the arrests since 2003 were
    made in Iran, China and Egypt. Internet censorship has become a cause
    with global relevance.

    I was invited to present a paper at the two-day event that covered the
    research for my forthcoming book, The Blogging Revolution, on the
    Internet in repressive regimes, plans by Australian Prime Minister
    Kevin Rudd to combat Internet child pornography, and my work with
    Amnesty International Australia on its campaign against Chinese web
    filtering, Uncensor.

    The goal of Global Voices, started in late 2004, is to provide
    insights into non-Western nations to Western audiences through
    country-specific blogs. The last years have seen its agenda expand to
    include a translation service for multiple languages, Global Voices
    Lingua , support for minorities in developing nations (the Rising
    Voices project) and Voices without Votes, the chance for global
    citizens to comment on the 2008 US presidential election campaign in
    every country except America.

    The Budapest summit featured bloggers and activists from places as
    diverse as Madagascar, India, Belarus, Kenya, Pakistan, Singapore,
    Bangladesh, Armenia, Egypt, Iran and China. It was constantly stressed
    that although the Internet can't bring democratic reform on its own--
    only citizens of a country have the right to determine a political
    system, not outside forces--it is allowing on-the-ground organizations
    to challenge corruption, fraudulent elections and police-led torture.
    Populations are being empowered.

    Although everybody I met came from varied backgrounds, from the elites
    to indigenous communities using new technology to find a voice in a
    country like Bolivia, the sense of community was palpable. What can an
    Australian journalist like myself really understand about democratic
    struggles in Iran and Bangladesh? By sharing stories, it soon became
    clear that many speakers related to others on the opposite side of the
    globe. Tools such as YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, blogs, e-mail,
    FeedBurner and text messaging were common denominators used by a
    minority online community to challenge state-run, media lies.

    Nobody talked about revolution or massive social change, but rather
    the ability to become engaged in a process usually reserved for an
    unelected class. In Morocco, for example, bloggers filmed corrupt
    policemen taking bribes and posted them on YouTube. "Targuist Sniper"
    inspired many others to act similarly, and the short videos have been
    watched millions of times. One female Egyptian blogger posted photos
    of police torture by tagging her entries with the names of the accused
    officials. Some of this evidence was used in a court of law. Two close
    US allies were forced to publicly respond to internal pressure.

    Numerous sessions revealed insights into societies all too easily
    categorized as oppressive. Iranian exile Hamid Tehrani revealed that
    the regime, now with one of the most effective web-filtering systems
    outside of China, bans many anti-George W. Bush sites such as Juan
    Cole's Informed Comment and The Huffington Post but allows a neocon
    and prowar site such as Pajamas Media to remain uncensored. It was a
    typically illogical move.

    Only last week Iranian members of parliament announced a draft bill
    that aims to "toughen punishment for disturbing mental security in
    society." The text of the bill would add "establishing websites and
    weblogs promoting corruption, prostitution and apostasy" to the list
    of crimes punishable by execution.

    The perception of the Internet in various countries remains troubling.
    Singaporean blogger Au Wai Pang said that the tool is "free" in his
    country, "but people behave like it is not." Self-censorship is a key
    barrier to open debate. Au reminded the Budapest audience that
    technology isn't always the answer to censorship issues. "How do you
    change people's minds," he asked, "[for] many who don't believe in a
    society with free speech?" Nothing beats face-to-face interaction, but
    the web has become a space where citizens can voice their opinions and
    have them respected often for the first time.

    A number of prominent Kenyan bloggers, including Ory Okolloh and Daudi
    Were, discussed the role of new technology in the aftermath of the
    stolen election in late 2007. With only 7-10 percent web penetration
    in the country, bloggers on election day woke up early to film people
    waiting patiently in line to vote. Some were even embedded with
    foreign observers and could immediately report, via SMS and Twitter,
    irregularities in the counting process. International support in the
    Diaspora was crucial to highlight this relatively stable nation
    descend into ethnic chaos.

    Blogger Luis Carlos Diaz, from Venezuela, debunked many of the Western
    myths about President Hugo Chávez. "The problem is we have too much
    petroleum," Diaz lamented. Although critical of many of his policies,
    Diaz said that Chávez was a democratically elected leader who wasn't
    quashing freedom of speech. "Voting is a sport in Venezuela," he said.
    To remain awake during the weekly eight-hour diatribes by Chávez on
    state television, bloggers were providing an alternative perspective
    on issues that matter to average citizens, such as poverty, housing
    and education. Diaz said he'd recently spoken to workers whose job is
    to transcribe Chávez's speeches. They usually last around 3,000 pages
    every week.

    Unsurprisingly, China featured prominently in the sessions. Rebecca
    MacKinnon, former CNN journalist and now academic in Hong Kong,
    stressed that debate had to progress past who is more "brainwashed,"
    Western or Chinese audiences. One of the key translators of Chinese
    blog posts for Global Voices, John Kennedy, challenged his audience by
    asking whether the growing Western anger against the Chinese people
    was justified. Was nationalism as great an influence as claimed? Was
    self-determination for Tibet so unacceptable in the motherland? Are
    Chinese netizens any more thin-skinned than Westerners when attacked
    online for their opinions?

    Despite these valid questions, one of China's leading dissidents,
    Isaac Mao, wished that the Chinese mob mentality online on issues of
    national importance wasn't so strong. He stressed that although the
    concept of freedom of speech is paramount in the West, many other
    societies place greater emphasis on the rule of law and fighting
    corruption.

    Mao, who launched Digital Nomads to host hundreds of independent blogs
    away from prying authoritarian rule, feared citizens in prosperous,
    Western citizens rarely understood the "crimes of omission" in their
    own societies. "They don't get why the non-Western world wants to talk
    about issues that the Western largely ignores," Mao said, "such as
    poverty and environmental degradation." A major theme of the event was
    highlighted. Too few bloggers in the West were bridging the
    information gap between different societies and preferred to preach
    rather than listen.

    The role of blogs in China is more than simply reacting to perceived
    Western slights. Instead, many netizens may not be calling for the
    dissolution of the Communist Party or planning a revolution, but
    they're been given far more freedoms today than five years ago.
    Mirroring what I found during my research in China last year, very few
    Chinese bloggers appear upset with the excessive filtering (though
    some are unaware what they're missing out on.) This doesn't mean,
    however, that the apparent blocking of parts of Facebook isn't
    annoying for many users or the creeping Olympic crackdown.

    It was encouraging to hear from IT insiders that many employees of
    companies such as Google and Yahoo feel distinctly uncomfortable with
    the role their companies play in a country such as China and regularly
    leak material about their actions anonymously and develop tools to
    allow an e-mail program such as Gmail to be used securely, away from
    the prying eyes of censorious regimes.

    The Budapest conference showed yet again that the mainstream media
    remains woefully under-prepared and unwilling to cover vast swathes of
    the world. Blogging and citizen journalism therefore provides an
    essential alternative to the daily obsession in much of our media with
    re-printing government and corporate spin as news.

    ---
    http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080721/l oewenstein

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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