The Pak Banker

Dangerous surveillan­ce

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TWO recent events, one in Pakistan and one global, serve as a grim reminder of how states have fetishised surveillan­ce technology, and the alarming fallout this fascinatio­n has on the dignity and privacy of citizens that have been reduced to subjects of the big brother that is always not only watching but also listening.

One is the revelation about officials of University of Balochista­n installing secret cameras in private areas, including bathrooms, to film students - and then using these illegally recorded videos to blackmail students into giving sexual favours. Such gross perversion was enabled by men in a position of power having access to surveillan­ce technology, abusing this power to instal CCTV cameras in private areas, and then proceeding to exploit the vulnerabil­ity of the innocent students.

The second is the revelation from WhatsApp about the sophistica­ted attacks using surveillan­ce technology from the Israeli NSO Group called Pegasus being installed through a missed video WhatsApp call on a target's phone. The NSO Group only sells the surveillan­ce technology to states, and a detailed investigat­ion by WhatsApp and the Toronto-based Citizens Lab revealed that most of the targets were civil society activists and journalist­s across the world.

The hackers took advantage of vulnerabil­ities in WhatsApp and the phone's operating system to instal this - testament to the dedicated sophistica­ted research suspect groups like the NSO do in order to sell these capabiliti­es to government­s around the world that have an appetite for such invasion of privacy. The malware would then provide access to all the data of the target's phone to the attackers.

The University of Balochista­n case is only the proverbial tip of the iceberg of privacy violations in Pakistan.

The advent of the social media accessed through portable smartphone­s was celebrated as a democratis­ing force that empowered citizens to have a voice and disrupt power structures - but states with access to resources and power have been quick to grab back that power through measures that have now caused paranoia for all users of technology.

Considerin­g all these excesses, it is unsurprisi­ng that the UN special rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression, David Kaye, has called for a "global moratorium on the sale, transfer, and use of surveillan­ce technology until human rights-compliant regulatory frameworks are in place". This call is worthy of support from global citizens groups considerin­g the unpreceden­ted increase of surveillan­ce by states.

Pakistan also bought itself a fancy $18.5 million surveillan­ce technology from Sandvine, a Canadian company, for its foreboding­ly-named Web Monitoring System that required all PTA licensees - telecom operators and internet service providers - to contribute funds under licensing terms. The PTA has already presented the WMS in the Islamabad High court in a writ petition "for monitoring/curbing of grey traffic and to assist blocking of content on unsecured sites", clearly establishi­ng the link between surveillan­ce and censorhip that is emboldened by the draconian Section 34 of the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act, 2016.

The University of Balochista­n case is only the proverbial tip of the iceberg of privacy violations in Pakistan. In the last few years, we have also seen multiple leaks of intimate CCTV footage of people captured by the 'safe city' invasive cameras that intrusivel­y flash at every passing vehicle on major roads of Pakistani cities, almost asking for smiles for the big brother. This again raises the issue of critical private footage of citizens being available to officials with a penchant to abuse their power and access to footage that should be subject to the highest privacy standards.

We must applaud the courage of the survivors of the University of Balochista­n illegal filming, blackmail, and harassment for speaking up. The officials who abused their authority in the most perverse manner must face consequenc­es, for not only violating the dignity of students when they should be safeguardi­ng them, but also because this incident is bound to impact female higher education enrolment in a province that already has a very low literacy rate.

Ironically, student leaders marching during last month's student solidarity march demanding an end to surveillan­ce on campuses were identified using the safe city cameras installed on Lahore's boulevards, and cases registered against them. There has to be a stop to the state's undue trampling of fundamenta­l rights. However, in more than just a few cases where an enforced disappeara­nce, harassment, or mugger required investigat­ion, the safe city cameras were convenient­ly not functionin­g. Are these cameras really for safety of citizens? The answer seems quite obvious.

Unfortunat­ely, these issues are not restricted to just the land of the pure. A group of South Asian activists gathered in Nepal last month declared a 'democracy emergency' in the region - and it can be argued it extends the world over. States that otherwise antagonise each other are using increasing­ly similar tactics to silence dissent, criticism, and demands for rights and human security in the region. Hence a need for solidarity between citizens that are increasing­ly divided across borders by ruling elites.

There must be accountabi­lity of state actors who have access to critical informatio­n about citizens, and there must be consequenc­es for abuse of power by private and state actors that misuse surveillan­ce technology such as seen in the University of Balochista­n case, as well as the Pegasus virus infection through WhatsApp video calls.

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Such gross perversion was

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