The Borneo Post

Lebanon’s security forces question activists over social media posts

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BEIRUT: Lebanon’s security forces are increasing­ly bringing activists in for questionin­g over their social media posts, sparking widespread anger in recent days that freedom of expression is being squeezed.

Since last week, the government’s cyber crimes bureau has called in at least six activists because of comments they made on social media.

One was interrogat­ed over a post blaming President Michel Aoun for the country’s widespread corruption, sluggish economy, and poor wages.

Others were questioned for mocking a “miracle” by a saint revered in Lebanon.

Dozens of people on Tuesday evening gathered in downtown Beirut to protest the “unpreceden­ted degradatio­n in freedom of expression”.

Many held up signs printed with the words “#Against oppression”, while one posed with a keyboard decorated with large paper-made handcuffs.

Diala Haidar, a Lebanon campaigner at Amnesty Internatio­nal, said the rights group has “noticed censorship increasing­ly interferin­g in spaces of expression in Lebanon”.

“More than one security or military authority have started monitoring and calling in opinion holders for questionin­g.”

Multi- confession­al Lebanon is seen to be a relatively open-minded country compared to the rest of the Middle East region.

The tiny Mediterran­ean state’s constituti­on protects freedom of opinion, written and oral, and of the press.

Its penal code, however, punishes libel and defamation of officials. Security apparatuse­s are “arbitraril­y” drawing from those articles when bringing in Lebanese over their social media posts, according to Haidar.

The questioned individual­s end up accused, for example, of insulting the president, insulting religion or “inciting sectarian strife”, she said.

Bassam Khawaja, Lebanon researcher at Human Rights Watch, agreed there was a worrying trend.

“For the past two years we’ve seen a troubling pattern of escalating retaliatio­n against criticism of authoritie­s in Lebanon,” he said.

“People are being arrested and interrogat­ed for peaceful Facebook posts in a country where the laws still technicall­y provide up to three years in prison for defamation, with serious implicatio­ns for freedom of expression,” he said.

In a Facebook post on Friday directed at the country’s president, 25-year- old Elie El-Khoury listed a series of complaints.

“The people, your excellency, pay: the highest telephone and internet bills in the world and get the worst service,” he wrote.

“Unfortunat­ely, your excellency, you are not up to our expectatio­ns because you turned the country into a family home,” he said, referring to members of the Aoun family who are in government, like his son-in-law Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil.

Following Khoury’s post, the cyber crimes bureau called him in for questionin­g. When his lawyer intervened, they rescinded their request without giving any explanatio­n.

“I wrote the post to express my pain and how fed up all young men and women are,” he told AFP.

“There aren’t any jobs or any decent salaries.”

“I’m 25 and if I want to buy a flat, I can’t,” said the graduate in business administra­tion, who is preparing for a PhD.

“I didn’t insult anyone in my post,” he said.

In recent years, Lebanon has struggled to stave off an economic meltdown while tackling a series of political crises.

Aoun was elected president in 2016 after a two-year political vacuum.

In May, the country held its first parliament­ary elections in nine years – but Prime Minister Saad Hariri has still been unable to form a new government.

In less than two years, Beirut’s Skeyes Centre for Media and Cultural Freedom has recorded at least 35 violations against journalist­s, intellectu­als and activists.

This “intimidati­on does not come out of nowhere. It has been an increasing pattern over the past two years,” Skeyes communicat­ion officer Jad Shahrour said.

On Friday, as he left his home near Beirut, journalist and activist Mohammad Awad was dragged in by the General Security Agency for questionin­g.

“They didn’t tell me if I was being called in over a comment or a specific article I had written,” he said.

Awad was released after he signed a “promise not to oppose the three presidents” – the president, premier and parliament speaker – “and the heads of religious sects” in Lebanon, he said.

Activists have been made to sign pledges they will abstain from social media for a given period or stop criticisin­g certain people in exchange for being released.

Amnesty Internatio­nal’s Haidar said these steps were illegal and amounted to “blackmaili­ng”.

Recent disciplina­ry measures were a “dangerous sign that could also lead to creating an atmosphere of fear and self- censorship,” she said.

“Local laws should protect people and their right to express themselves – not protect the authoritie­s and their men from accountabi­lity, criticism or even mockery,” said Haidar. — AFP

 ??  ?? Activists gather in downtown Beirut, to protest against a recent wave of interrogat­ions by Lebanese security forces of people making political comments on social media. The banners in Arabic read ‘against oppression’. — AFP photo
Activists gather in downtown Beirut, to protest against a recent wave of interrogat­ions by Lebanese security forces of people making political comments on social media. The banners in Arabic read ‘against oppression’. — AFP photo

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