Sunday Tribune

App turns citizens into social media police

- NAZIH OSSEIRAN

BEIRUT: A Saudi app that lets ordinary people “play the role of a police officer” may have alerted authoritie­s to the tweets of a student whose sentencing to 34 years in jail has drawn internatio­nal condemnati­on.

Just weeks after the verdict against Salma al-shehab – a doctoral candidate at Britain’s Leeds University – rights groups say another woman was given a 45-year sentence for her social media posts – highlighti­ng a crackdown targeting women.

Nourah bint Saeed al-qahtani was convicted of “using the internet to tear the (Saudi) social fabric”, according to Dawn, a Washington-based human rights group.

While it is not clear how Qahtani’s posts were detected, rights groups think Shehab was reported by citizens using Kollona Amn, a government app that lets citizens alert authoritie­s to everyday incidents like road accidents or suspicious behaviour.

“I went into your account, and I found it to be pitiful and full of trash, I took several pictures and I sent them to Kollona Amn,” one user posted below a comment by Shehab, a screenshot reviewed by the Thomson Reuters Foundation showed.

Kollona Amn, meaning “we are all security” in Arabic, has been downloaded more than a million times from the Google Playstore.

Despite billing itself as a utility app to speed up “rescue missions”, rights campaigner­s say it helps authoritie­s cast a wider net for activists and dissidents seen as a threat to the Saudi government.

“The problem in Saudi Arabia is

that their understand­ing of a crime is much wider than what is recognisab­le under internatio­nal law,” said Rothna Begum, women’s rights researcher at Human Rights Watch.

“It is so broad and vague; anything could be a crime.”

The Saudi Ministry of Communicat­ions and Informatio­n could not be reached for comment, but officials have said previously that the country does not have political prisoners.

“We have prisoners in Saudi Arabia who have committed crimes and who were put to trial by our courts and were found guilty,” Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Adel al-jubeir said in July.

Rights groups say government-employed Twitter trolls scour social media on the lookout for dissent, harassing

anyone who appears to digress from the official line.

But without the kind of surveillan­ce made possible via the Kollona Amn app, rights activists say it would have been difficult for the government to detect Shehab’s Twitter presence.

Twitter users can use Kollona Amn to flag other users’ tweets by tagging the app’s account, or the handle of the country’s state security agency.

Lina al-hathloul, head of monitoring and communicat­ion at Alost, a rights group, said she has documented at least eight other instances of online accounts tagging Kollona Amn’s account under activists’ tweets.

“They really want civil society to be invisible, they don’t want people to exist, not even online,” she added.

Around the world, similar apps have given rise to a wave of digital vigilantis­m – from tools that let people tip off the police to speeding drivers to breaches of Covid-19 rules.

They are often controvers­ial. In South Africa, Whatsapp chat groups double up as neighbourh­ood watches have been criticised for being racist, while in India, so-called cyber volunteers recruited by the government go after online content that they deem to be illegal or anti-national.

In Saudi Arabia, it is not the first time that an app disseminat­ed by the government has drawn criticism from human rights groups, despite official claims that the tools are simply aimed at making everyday tasks easier and safer.

The Tawakalna app – meaning “in God we trust” in Arabic – originated as Saudi Arabia’s Covid-19 tracing tool.

Now, it includes a reporting feature that lets citizens submit complaints, for example about suspected constructi­on violations, rights campaigner­s said.

Another app, Balagh, invites people to report corrupt government employees and commercial violations, but is sometimes used to settle personal vendettas, they added.

The Absher app is used by Saudis who sponsor foreign labourers to give permission for their employees to leave the country, but critics say it often serves to constrain the free movement of workers living in the kingdom.

According to a 2019 Human Rights Watch report, employers can do this by issuing exit and entry visas with specific dates or by controllin­g their exit visas.

The app was launched in 2015 when women needed the approval of their male guardians to travel, giving men an easy way to control their female relatives’ movements.

Convincing ordinary Saudis to spy and snitch on each other is often framed as a national duty, said Taha Alhajji, a legal consultant for the European-saudi Organisati­on for Human Rights.

“The other method is fear: If someone knows of a violation and does not report it, then they’re a party to that violation. The person covering up a crime is considered an accomplice.”

The verdicts against Shehab and Qahtani have shaken Saudi Arabia’s activist community and sent a chill through the country’s digital spaces, activists said.

Since Shehab was sentenced, social media users have pored over her personal accounts and those belonging to her family, digging up old posts in an effort to discredit her.

One user shared comments posted by her parents, tagging the Twitter accounts of Kollona Amn and the state security agency (PSS), according to screenshot­s seen by the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“I hope @pss_ar and @kamnapp look at the informatio­n above and hold her mother and father accountabl­e,” typed one user below a post by Shehab’s father.

The sentence against the motherof-two was widely seen as a warning to the kingdom’s human rights defenders, said Khalid Ibrahim, executive director of Lebanon-based Gulf Center for Human Rights.

“They feel like they’re followed everywhere they go, even if they are in exile,” he said. |

Foundation

 ?? ?? WOMEN are being targeted for using social media to voice their concerns. | Firmbee Pixabay
WOMEN are being targeted for using social media to voice their concerns. | Firmbee Pixabay

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