âThe New York-based Human Rights Watch has accused the Tunisian government of detaining critical online writers and blocking websites that publish reports of human rights abuses in the country.
The group stressed that Tunisia had made some progress in increasing access to the internet over the past few years, lifting bans on some websites, but that it continued to flout its national and international legal commitments to free expression, the right to access information, and the right to privacy by censoring the internet. The group said the government was still imprisoning
writers for expressing their views online, and imposing undue regulations on its Internet Service Providers (ISPs) and internet cafés.â
Entirely the right country in which the discussion about the digital divide should be taking place.
Interestingly, the Summit was opened by the President of Switzerland, who made the following apposite comments:
âIt is, quite frankly, unacceptable for the United Nations to continue to include among its members states which imprison citizens for the sole reason that they have criticized their government on the Internet or in the media.â
How sad. Because, of course, we have to accept that state of affairs and it is that very United Nations that is claiming the right to take over and run the internet (as well as, if not better than the way they ran the oil-for-food programme).
While this was going on, the Tunisian police prevented a meeting of the Tunisian Civil Society summit and its spokesmanâs attempt to describe the situation to ISN Security Watch by telephone was interrupted.
There have been other incidents of attacks on journalists both Tunisian and foreign, whenever stories appeared about the human rights situation.
And just to demonstrate quite definitively what that digital divide is about
âTests conducted between 2.30pm and 4.30pm using the 3S Global Net ISP found that the French and Arabic press releases for Human Rights Watchâs latest report on internet freedom in the Middle East were also blocked in Tunis.
Users trying to access these pages received a page disguised to look like a French-language Microsoft Internet Explorer error page that read âImpossible de trouver la pageâ (âImpossible to find the pageâ).
The results were consistent with the blocking behaviour exhibited in previous tests documented in a Human Rights Watchâs report.â
These are the people who are demanding that the terrible American âcontrolâ of the internet should cease and they are the ones with whom we, in Europe, line ourselves up.
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