Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

How Azerbaijan Demonizes The Internet To Keep Citizens Offline

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • How Azerbaijan Demonizes The Internet To Keep Citizens Offline

    HOW AZERBAIJAN DEMONIZES THE INTERNET TO KEEP CITIZENS OFFLINE
    By Sarah Kendzior and Katy Pearce

    http://www.slate.com/blogs/future_tense/2012/05/11/azerbaijan_eurovision_son
    Friday, May 11, 2012, at 3:10 PM ET


    Photo by SAMIR ALIYEV/AFP/Getty Images

    On May 22, the former Soviet republic of Azerbaijan will play host
    to the Eurovision Song Contest, an annual competition between singers
    from countries in Europe and parts of the former Soviet Union. Though
    little known in the United States, Eurovision is the most popular
    non-sporting event in the world and will be watched by hundreds
    of millions-many of whom will be seeing Azerbaijan, a small Muslim
    petrostate bordering Iran and Russia, for the first time.

    Azerbaijan's government has spent more than $700 million on promotion
    and infrastructure in order to put its best image forward.

    But as the world discovers Azerbaijan, the Azerbaijani government is
    doing its best to keep its citizens from connecting with the world.

    Over the past few years, the Azerbaijani government has waged an
    aggressive media campaign against the Internet. Social media has
    become synonymous with deviance, criminality, and treason. Television
    programs show '~Qfamily tragedies'~R and '~Qcriminal incidents'~R
    after young people join Facebook and Twitter. In March 2011, the
    country's chief psychiatrist proclaimed that social media users
    suffer mental disorders and cannot maintain relationships. In April
    2012, the Interior Ministry linked Facebook use with trafficking of
    woman and sexual abuse of children. Since May 2011, the Azerbaijani
    parliament has been debating laws to curtail social media, citing
    the deleterious effect on society. Social media has become a vital
    political issue despite the fact that 78 percent of Azerbaijanis have
    never used the Internet, only 7 percent go online daily, and just 7
    percent-almost all male, highly educated, and wealthy-use Facebook.

    Azerbaijan has a long history of media censorship. During the Soviet
    era, media were state-controlled, and dissidents faced harsh penalties
    for publishing political works. Little changed when Azerbaijan became
    independent in 1991. Almost all media outlets are owned or controlled
    by the state. The few opposition journalists face harassment, physical
    violence, imprisonment, and even death.

    Most authoritarian states treat the Internet the same way they do
    print media: They censor it. Azerbaijan has taken a more insidious
    route. They do not heavily filter or block the Internet but instead
    leave it open, allowing the government to better monitor and punish
    rebellious activities. In 2010, two online activists were arrested
    for posting a video satirizing government waste on YouTube. Their case
    was never mentioned in Azerbaijan's print media-but was relentlessly
    showcased online, where it frightened the bloggers' peers. As a
    result, Azerbaijan's frequent Internet users became less supportive
    of activism, and online dissent has quieted.

    This strategy worked quite well with elites. But after the events in
    Tunisia and Egypt in early 2011, the Azerbaijani government decided
    to adopt a more aggressive strategy to shield regular citizens from
    discussions of dissent or collective action. Azerbaijan has moved
    from intimidating users who are already online to keeping the rest
    of the nation offline by making social media use seem like a form of
    bad citizenship.

    To see how successful Azerbaijan's anti-social media campaign has been,
    one need only to compare Azerbaijan to its poorer, yet more democratic,
    neighboring post-Soviet states Georgia and Armenia.

    Azerbaijan trails far behind in Internet use despite the fact that
    the cost of an Internet connection and a computer is roughly the same
    in all three countries. In Armenia and Georgia, 20 percent use the
    Internet daily, but in Azerbaijan, it is only 7 percent. In Armenia
    and Georgia, 40 percent and 33 percent of households have computers,
    but in Azerbaijan, only 15 percent have them. In Armenia and Georgia,
    35 percent and 29 percent of households have Internet at home, while
    only 11 percent of Azerbaijani households do.

    The framing of the Internet as a dangerous place has made men hesitant
    to allow their wives and daughters access. As a result, only 14
    percent of Azerbaijani women have ever used the Internet. More than
    70 percent of Internet users, as well as Facebook users, are men. The
    women who are online are often constrained: It is not uncommon for
    young brides to give their Facebook passwords to their husbands for
    monitoring. Women worry about maintaining their and their families'
    honor online and offline and tend to prefer to not engage in discussion
    forums.

    Azerbaijanis are proud that their country is hosting Eurovision. The
    competition symbolizes that Azerbaijan is not a second class country
    but a player on the world stage. But as the world spotlight shines on
    Azerbaijan, citizens find themselves increasingly in the dark-and not
    only in terms of the internet. On May 1 of this year, the government
    banned foreign television broadcasting , as "foreign television series
    often contradict our mentality" and may expose Azerbaijanis to new
    ideas. Decades of exposure to foreign television and film is now
    ending. The potential of the Internet as a place to learn, explore,
    create, and communicate is unfulfilled-instead, it is yet another
    thing citizens are told to fear.


    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X