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                Date: 2001-01-05
                 
                 
                Die 20 Feinde des Internet
                
                 
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      In 45 Staaten weltweit ist es mehr als schwierig, einen ganz  
gewöhnlichen Internet-Zugang zu bekommen. Etwa 20  
Staatsführungen können laut Reporter ohne Grenzen mit Fug  
& Recht als Feinde des Mediums bezeichnet werden.  
 
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Reporters Without Borders/Reporters Sans Frontières 
 
The enemies of the Internet URL:  
http://www.rsf.fr/uk/html/internet/ennemis.html espanol:  
http://www.rsf.fr/esp/html/internet/internet.html francais:  
http://www.rsf.fr/internet/ennemis.html
                   
 
Forty-five countries restrict their citizens' access to the  
internet - usually by forcing them to subscribe to a state-run  
Internet Service Provider (ISP). Twenty of these countries  
may be described as real enemies of this new means of  
communication. On the pretext of protecting the public from  
"subversive ideas" or defending "national security and unity",  
some governments totally prevent their citizens from gaining  
access to the internet. Others control a single ISP or even  
several, installing filters blocking access to web sites  
regarded as unsuitable and sometimes forcing users to  
officially register with the authorities. The internet is a two- 
edged sword for authoritarian regimes. On the one hand, it  
enables any citizen to enjoy an unprecedented degree of  
freedom of speech and therefore constitutes a threat to the  
government. On the other, however, the internet is a major  
factor in economic growth, due in particular to online trade  
and the exchange of technical and scientific information,  
which prompts some of these governments to support its  
spread. The economic argument seems to be winning the  
day in countries such as Malaysia and Singapore, where  
controlling "dangerous" sites is proving difficult for the  
authorities. Moreover, web surfers can find ways round  
censorship: encoding, going through servers that offer  
anonymity when consulting banned sites or sending email,  
connecting via GSM telephones and cellphones, and so on.  
Reporters Sans Frontières has selected 20 countries that it  
regards as enemies of the internet because they control  
access totally or partially, have censored web sites or taken  
action against users. They are: the countries of Central Asia  
and the Caucasus (Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kirghizia,  
Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan), Belarus, Burma,  
China, Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Saudi Arabia,  
Sierra Leone, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia and Vietnam. Belarus In  
line with its repressive attitude towards other media,  
Alexander Lukashenka's government does not leave its  
citizens free to explore the internet independently. Access is  
supplied by a single ISP, Belpak, which belongs to the state.  
Burma Censorship is total, due to a state monopoly on  
access. In addition, a law passed in September 1996 obliges  
anyone who owns a computer to declare it to the  
government. Those who fail to comply may face up to 15  
years in prison. Central Asia and the Caucasus In most of  
these countries, the authorities control or restrict internet  
access. In Tajikistan, a single ISP, Telecom Technologies,  
owned by the government, offers web access - and only in  
the capital, Dushanbe. Turkmenistan, a "black hole" where  
information is concerned, offers even more restricted access.  
Although there are privately owned ISPs in Uzbekistan and  
Azerbaijan, their operations are controlled by the  
telecommunications ministry, which is responsible for  
chastising those who speak out against the government. In  
Kazakhstan, and to a lesser extent in Kirghizia, the  
authorities demand prohibitively expensive usage and  
connection fees from private ISPs. China Although internet  
use is spreading rapidly, the government is trying to keep up  
pressure on users. They are closely monitored and are  
supposed to register with the authorities. In January 1999 a  
computer technician, Lin Hai, was sentenced to two years in  
prison by a Shanghai court for giving the email addresses of  
30,000 Chinese subscribers to a dissident site that publishes  
an online magazine from the United States. Meanwhile  
officials fearing disturbances as the tenth anniversary of the  
Tiananmen massacre (4 June 1999) drew near ordered the  
closure of 300 cybercafÈs in Shanghai, on the pretext that  
they did not have the necessary authorisation. In order to  
prevent the Chinese from finding information on the web, the  
authorities have blocked access to some sites. This  
happened to the BBC in October 1998. Zhang Weiguo, editor  
of the New Century Net (www.ncn.org) site, in Chinese,  
launched in the United States in 1996, estimates that it  
takes two months on average for the Chinese authorities to  
track down the relay server of a site and block access to it.  
The sites then change their address. Some censored pages  
are distributed by email, like underground newspapers that  
are photocopied and passed around secretly. Cuba The  
government controls the internet, just as it does other media.  
There is no free expression in Cuba at national level. About  
ten independent - and illegal - news agencies such as  
Cubanet and Cuba Free Press telephone reports to  
organisations based in Miami which publish them on their  
web pages. But this news is still the subject of repression: in  
October 1998, a foreign ministry official filed a complaint for  
"insult" against Mario Viera, of the independent agency Cuba  
Verdad, following publication of an article criticising him on  
the US-based Cubanet site. The journalist is still awaiting  
trial, and faces an 18-month prison sentence if convicted. Iran  
Censorship of the internet is identical to that affecting other  
media and covers the same subjects: sexuality, religion,  
criticism of the Islamic Republic, any mention of Israel, the  
United States, and so on. Because of the filters put in place  
by the authorities, access to some sites is banned: medical  
students are denied access to web pages that deal with  
anatomy, for instance. Iraq People in Baghdad have no direct  
access to the internet. Web sites of the official press and  
certains ministries are maintained by servers based in  
Jordan. In any case, because of the embargo very few people  
own computers. Libya It is impossible to explore the web  
from Libya. The government carefully keeps the population  
away from international information networks with the aim of  
maintaining control of their minds. North Korea People in  
Pyongyang cannot access the internet. The government  
deliberately prevents the population from seeing any news  
other than its own propaganda. The few official sites aimed at  
foreigners (the national news agency, newspapers and  
ministries) are maintained by servers located in Japan. Saudi  
Arabia Even though 37 private companies have been given  
permission to operate as ISPs, all traffic at the moment goes  
through the servers of the Science and Technology Centre, a  
public body, which is equipped with filters banning access to  
sites that provide "information contrary to Islamic values".  
The internet is officially regarded as "a harmful force for  
westernising people's minds". Sierra Leone As part of their  
repression of the opposition press, the authorities have also  
attacked an online newspaper. In June 1999, two journalists  
from the daily The Independent Observer, Abdul Rhaman  
Swaray and Jonathan Leigh, were arrested. They were  
accused in particular of collaborating with the online  
newspaper "Ninjas", which is published on a site based  
abroad (www.sierra-leone.cc) by journalists who have gone  
into hiding. Sudan Through Sudanet, the only ISP, the state  
controls the few connections to the internet possible in this  
country where freedom of expression is often suppressed.  
Syria Internet access is officially banned to individuals.  
Offenders may face a prison sentence, just as they may for  
"unauthorised" contacts with foreigners. Only official  
organisations are allowed access to the internet through the  
public telecommunications authority, whose ISP maintains  
web sites for state newspapers, the national news agency  
and a few ministries. Tunisia The Tunisian Internet Agency  
(ATI) controls the two privately owned ISPs, which are in fact  
connected with the authorities: one is run by President Ben  
Ali's daughter and the second by another person close to the  
government. Their central servers control the access of  
certain users. In November 1998, following publication by  
Amnesty International of a report on human rights violations,  
a web site with the address www.amnesty-tunisia.org,  
deliberately designed to create confusion with the non- 
government organisation, praised the president's work for  
human rights. The director of the public relations agency that  
launched the site - one of whose biggest customers is the  
Tunisian government - claimed that he was merely coming to  
the country's defence. Meanwhile, access to Amnesty  
International's official site was blocked by the authorities.  
Vietnam Anyone who wants to access the internet has to  
ask for permission from the interior ministry and sign up with  
one of the two state-owned ISPs. Access is blocked to sites  
maintained by Vietnamese organisations based abroad and  
international human rights organisations. On 9 June, the  
Police Ministry ordered the post office to cancel the journalist  
Nguyen Dan Que's Internet account, after this former political  
prisoner had released a communique through the Internet  
calling for freedom a month earlier. Recommendations  
Reporters Sans Frontières calls on the governments of these  
20 countries to immediately: - abolish the state monopoly on  
internet access and, where appropriate, stop controlling  
private ISPs, - cancel the obligation for citizens to register  
with the government before obtaining internet access, -  
abolish censorship through the use of filters, and stop  
blocking access to certain sites maintained by foreign  
servers, - protect the confidentiality of internet exchanges,  
particularly by lifting controls on electronic mail, - call off the  
legal proceedings undertaken against internet users who  
have done no more than exercise their right to freedom of  
expression. Reporters Sans Frontières calls on Burma,  
China, Cuba, Kazakhstan, Saudi Arabia and Tajikistan to  
ratify and enforce the International Covenant on Civil and  
Political Rights, Article 19 of which stipulates that "everyone  
shall have the right (...) to receive and impart information and  
ideas of all kinds, regardless of frontiers (...)". The  
organisation also asks those states that have signed the  
covenant (Azerbaijan, Belarus, Iran, Iraq, Kazakhstan,  
Kirghizia, Libya, North Korea, Uzbekistan, Sierra Leone,  
Sudan, Syria, Tunisia and Vietnam) to respect the  
underbtakings they made by doing so. 
 
For further informations, please contact Reporters sans  
frontières: rsf@rsf.fr Source: Reporters Without  
Borders/Reporters Sans Frontières 
 
 
 
 
 
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edited by  
published on: 2001-01-05 
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