Future of online freedom of expression bleak - CPA
August 2, 2010 11:43 am
The post
war outlook for freedom of expression on the web and Internet in Sri Lanka is
not bright, The Centre for Policy Alternatives claims in a report. The CPA
states that the government continues to speak of the increasing need for
surveillance systems and imposing greater regulation on online content
providers.
Full
release;
The post war outlook for freedom of expression on the web and Internet
in Sri Lanka is not bright. In Sri Lanka’s recent history, freedom of
expression both online and elsewhere has come under threat. Online
journalists and bloggers have come under attack, censure and
surveillance. Websites have been shutdown and media premises have been
attacked. A strong culture of impunity prevails. The government
continues to speak of the increasing need for surveillance systems and imposing
greater regulation on online content providers.
What is important to note is that stifling content online is not something that is just happening in Sri Lanka. All over the world, regimes of all political persuasion, whether liberal, repressive or in between are finding it a challenge to strike a balance to preserve freedom of expression online. Liberal regimes such as Australia are proposing to use Internet filters to remove certain prescribed content. In Thailand authorities have banned thousands of websites that were deemed offensive to the monarchy. China is famous for its ‘great wall’ that blocks access to any site that the government deems is undesirable. In Saudi Arabia there is a government authority that determines which websites are acceptable and blocks all others. To date, a record 120 bloggers and Internet users remain imprisoned all over the world. Similarly, regimes of all political persuasion are implementing mechanisms that place Internet usage under surveillance. The French National Assembly have passed a law that allows the government to install software on an Internet user’s computer that can collect and record key strokes from the computer. The British and Australian governments are currently considering proposals to require communication firms to hold user information and organize it in a manner that is more easily accessible by law enforcement agencies.
Measures such as the British and French surveillance scheme and the global
trend towards stifling content online is worrying, especially when considered
from a Sri Lankan perspective. These precedents from abroad, especially
from developed ‘liberal’ governments can be opportunistically seized by regimes
like Sri Lanka to legitimize their own actions to clamp down on dissent.
In particular it is important to keep in mind the context in which these
measures are being carried out. At least in places like Australia, France
and the UK the proposed measures are announced publicly and debated vigorously.
It is possible for civil society to lobby law makers and regulators and
actually impact the policy making process. In contrast in countries like
Sri Lanka, laws are made in a culture of secrecy, there is very little
opportunity to meaningfully influence the law making process and worse often
what is legal and permissible and what happens in reality are two different
things.
In any event Internet users in Sri Lanka operate within a restrictive legal
framework. The Sri Lankan constitution protects the right to free speech and
publication. However it is subject to a host of restrictions including
public morality and national security. Moreover, neither the text of the
guarantee nor the restrictions imposed on the guarantee meet international
standards. In particular the constitutional text does not require that any
restrictions placed on the guarantee be limited by ‘reasonableness’ or ‘necessity’.
To date the Supreme Court has not made any pronouncements on the applicability
of freedom of expression guarantee to the Internet. The Court has made numerous
rulings as to the importance of free speech for a democracy, and how
criticizing the government and political parties are, per se, a permissible
exercise of the freedom of speech. Further the Court has upheld in
numerous occasions that arbitrary interference and attacks on journalists are a
violation of the freedom of expression guarantee. Thus, a strong argument
can be made that the freedom of expression guarantee should be applied to the
Internet and that online journalists should receive the same protection
afforded to traditional journalists. However, the Court has a weak record when
it comes to interpreting restrictions on constitutional rights. Quite often the
Court has opted for a narrow conservative approach, at odds with comparative
international jurisprudence, that allows over-broad national security
legislation to trump civil liberties.
Further there are a host of legislative provisions that currently limit freedom
of expression. These laws are not specifically targeted at online content;
however their existence nonetheless has an impact on the selection and manner
in which issues can be discussed online. Broadly they can be divided in to
general laws and laws relating to national security. The national
security laws especially emergency regulations and the PTA have been criticized
often for their over broad nature, lack of specificity and their insufficient
connection with the objectives they seek to achieve. The Sri Lankan
courts have not yet had an opportunity to consider how these content
restricting laws can be applied to the online sphere. However, this paper
considers examples from foreign jurisdictions and discusses the novel ways
these content restricting laws can be applied to the online sphere. Thus,
highlighting that in Sri Lanka, though these laws haven’t yet been enforced in
the online sphere, their mere existence alone warrants concern.
Further given the increasing threats to privacy posed by the Internet, this
paper considers the right to privacy in Sri Lanka. Under the Roman Dutch
common law of Sri Lanka the right to privacy is protected in specific
instances. However there is no right to privacy under the Constitution of Sri
Lanka. There are also no legislative provisions that protect general
information gathering and handling. The Sri Lanka Telecommunications Act No. 25
of 1991 (As Amended) (Sri Lanka) and the Computer Crimes Act No 24 of 2007 (Sri
Lanka) provides limited protection to Internet users from surveillance and
other forms of intercepting communications. However both the Acts
have provisions that allow law enforcement agencies and relevant Ministers to
intercept communications without any apparent restrictions or guidelines on
their general power to do so.
Considering these short comings this paper proposes recommendations to improve
freedom of expression online. Numerous steps can be taken both at a legal and a
policy level. The Government in consultation with service providers, Internet
users and bloggers should initiate significant law reform. Laws that
restrict discussion of politically and socially relevant content should be
repealed. The Government should take immediate steps to legislate for broad
privacy protection. Service providers need to provide clear and accessible
privacy policies so consumers are informed of their privacy rights.
Efforts to block websites and filter content has to be catalogued and
published. There needs to be an independent third party who can monitor such
moves and the implementation of any privacy policies. Breaches in privacy
policies and attempts to stifle online content should be publicized so that
users are aware of the limits to their privacy and freedom of expression
online.