| Subject: | [governance] Fwd: Proposals to regulate Internet could threaten freedom of expression, warns OSCE media freedom representative |
|---|---|
| Date: | Thu, 29 Sep 2011 13:26:51 +0400 |
| From: | Fouad Bajwa <fouadbajwa@gmail.com> |
| Reply-To: | governance@lists.cpsr.org,Fouad Bajwa <fouadbajwa@gmail.com> |
| To: | governance@lists.cpsr.org |
VIENNA, 28 September 2011 – The OSCE Representative on
Freedom of
the Media, Dunja Mijatoviã, voiced concern today about
Internet
regulation policies proposed by several participating States
and reminded
them of their OSCE media freedom commitments.
“Such
initiatives endanger freedom of expression and risk erecting
‘mind
walls’ - barriers to the flow of information and ideas,”
Mijatoviã said.
She cited in particular an initiative by
Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, among others, to
introduce an
“international code of conduct for information security”, a
proposal they would like to see adopted as a United Nations
resolution.
“Especially worrying is the draft code requesting States to
curb ‘the dissemination of information that incites
terrorism,
secessionism or extremism or that undermines other
countries’
political, economic and social stability, as well as their
spiritual and
cultural environment,’” Mijatoviã said.
“This neglects the fact that any country’s ‘spiritual
and cultural environment’ is enriched by a free flow of
information
and a vibrant civil society, as well as by a free and
pluralistic media
fostering debate, in particular on controversial issues of
public interest.
As is already the case with the national laws in the
countries that support
this initiative, the draft code relies on subjective and
vague notions of
‘secessionism’ and ‘extremism’”.
“Although States do have a legitimate right to ensure their
own
stability and protect themselves from all forms of crime,
OSCE commitments
rest on the core idea that freedom and security are
intimately linked.
There can be no freedom without security and no security
without
freedom,” she added.
Mijatoviã also noted with
concern that already in August the presidents of Armenia,
Belarus,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia and Tajikistan, citing
security reasons,
agreed to develop a common strategy to regulate and control
the Internet,
particularly social networks, on a regional level. In
addition, the
prosecutor-generals of several of these countries called for
government
control over social networks at a meeting in Minsk on 14
September.
“Such proposals risk fragmenting the Internet, thus cutting
off the users of those countries from access to the global
information
society and thereby interrupting the free flow of
information,”
Mijatoviã warned.
“Free Internet, including social
networks, blogs and online news media, leads to more
transparency and
political accountability worldwide – and this must be
preserved.”
Mijatoviã urged the respective
governments to reconsider their Internet strategies, keeping
in mind the
borderless nature of the Internet, and to ensure that it
remains an open
and public forum for freedom of expression for their
citizens, in line with
OSCE commitments and international standards of media
freedom.
She advised the respective governments to apply the
recommendations in
the report produced by her Office on Freedom of Expression
on the Internet
as well as the Joint Declaration on Freedom of Expression
and the Internet,
adopted in June by the rapporteurs on freedom of expression
of the UN, the
Organization of American States and the African Union with
the OSCE
Representative on Freedom of the Media.
The Representative
offered her Office’s assistance to participating States in
developing
Internet regulation policies in line with OSCE commitments
and
international standards of media freedom.
OSCE Press release
---- For your information
Fouad