WG: Draft Law on inrenet governance in Belarus - assistance needed
Dear all, my colleague from Diplo's ECBPIG sent me this message which I would like to share with you. May be you can help to spread this message as wide as possible. Thanks and regards, Wolf Marina Sokolova wrote Wed, 16 Dec 2009 09:31:
Dear Wolf, a few days ago a draft law on internet governance in Belarus has been published. You can find an unofficial English version at <a href="http://www.charter97.org/en/news/2009/12/14/24572/">http://www.charter97.org/en/news/2009/12/14/24572/</a>
I think that it is vital to launch an international campaign against this law. I would have been extremely grateful to you if you could inform as many people as you can about this draft.
Thank you in advance
Best regards, Marina Sokolova
http://www.diplointernetgovernance.org/profiles/message/listInbox?xg_source=...
comunica-ch phone +41 79 204 83 87 Skype: Wolf-Ludwig www.comunica-ch.net Digitale Allmend http://blog.allmend.ch - EURALO - ICANN's Regional At-Large Organisation http://euralo.org
Wolf Ludwig ha scritto:
Dear all,
my colleague from Diplo's ECBPIG sent me this message which I would like to share with you. May be you can help to spread this message as wide as possible.
It's not much different from the draft law that the Italian government has announced as a "crackdown on terrorists who attack Berlusconi". The text isn't out yet, but a minister said that all uses of Internet video streaming to broadcast street rallies and political events should need advance authorization by the government. Also it will be forbidden to express dissent or boo politicians speaking in public, as it "disrupts the political discourse in a violent manner". Moreover, judges will be able to require ISPs to blacklist websites (by IP, domain or URL) that "promote violence and crime" with an urgency procedure not requiring any kind of proper trial; something will also be done for Facebook groups (Facebook is now being used here as Twitter in Iran, it is the most pervasive uncensored media that we have) but it is unclear what - today an upcoming meeting between Facebook's Richard Allan and top politicians from Berlusconi's party, to discuss "better policies for Facebook", has been announced. For the moment, the government decided to defer discussions of these new measures and it might be that they will be watered down before approval - apparently the Berlusconi government is divided on them, with Berlusconi's loyals pushing in favour and others resisting. Certainly, the degree of political freedom in Italy (the only Western country where the press is "not completely free" according to Freedom House) is now extremely concerning to everyone - almost comparable to Belarus. (By the way, this is perhaps the main reason why I have been less and less involved with IG in the last times - the Italian situation is so much troubled that work needs to be done here.) Ciao, -- vb. Vittorio Bertola - vb [a] bertola.eu <-------- --------> now blogging & more at http://bertola.eu/ <--------
participants (2)
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Vittorio Bertola -
Wolf Ludwig