Qatar Tribune

Govts use pandemic to crack down on online dissent

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GOVERNMENT­S around the world are using the pandemic as a justificat­ion to expand surveillan­ce and crack down on dissent online, resulting in a 10th consecutiv­e annual decline in internet freedom, a human rights watchdog report said Wednesday.

The report by Washington-based Freedom House said authoritie­s in dozens of countries have cited the Covid-19 outbreak “to justify expanded surveillan­ce powers and the deployment of new technologi­es that were once seen as too intrusive.”

This is leading to increasing censorship of dissent and the expansion of technologi­cal systems for social control, according to the report.

“The pandemic is accelerati­ng society’s reliance on digital technologi­es at a time when the internet is becoming less and less free,” said Michael Abramowitz, president of the nonprofit group.

“Without adequate safeguards for privacy and the rule of law, these technologi­es can be easily repurposed for political repression.”

Freedom House’s index of internet based on a score assigned on a 100-point scale to 65 countries shows a drop in internet freedom for a 10th straight year.

The scale is based on 21 indicators pertaining to obstacles to access, limits on content and violations of user rights.

China was the worstranke­d country for the sixth consecutiv­e year, according to the report.

It said Chinese authoritie­s “combined low- and high-tech tools not only to manage the outbreak of the coronaviru­s, but also to deter internet users from sharing informatio­n from independen­t sources and challengin­g the official narrative.”

The report said these trends are showing a growing trend toward Chinese-style “digital authoritar­ianism” globally and a “splinterin­g” of the internet as each government imposes its own regulation­s.

Freedom House said that of the estimated 3.8 billion people using the internet, just 20 percent live in countries with a free internet, 32 percent in countries “partly free,” while 35 percent were in places where online activities are not free. The remainder live in countries that weren’t among the 65 assessed.

The report cited notable declines in countries where authoritie­s have imposed internet shutdowns including Myanmar, Kyrgyzstan and India, and in Rwanda for its use of “sophistica­ted spyware to monitor and intimidate exiled dissidents.”

The United States remained among those counties ranked free but saw its score decline in light of increased surveillan­ce used by law enforcemen­t against protest movements, executive orders on social media regulation­s, disinforma­tion propagated by President Donald Trump and moves to ban Chinese-owned apps TikTok and WeChat.

The app bans were described as “an arbitrary and disproport­ionate response to the genuine risks” from those services.

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