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In wake of Mumbai bombing
India increases its censorship of the Internet
By Ajay Prakash and K. Nesan
29 July 2006
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An Indian government order to Internet service providers (ISPs)
to block 17 Internet web sites and web pages resulted in Indians
being denied access for well over a week to whole swathes of the
Internet, including the blogs hosted on blogspot.com, typepad.com
and Geocities.
In the face of a public outcry, the United Progressive Alliance
government is now trying to shift blame for the lengthy disruption
of Internet service onto the countrys service providers,
saying it was they who chose to deny access to domains and blog-hosts,
rather than explicitly targeting the 17 sites that the government
had named in its order, because this was technically far easier
and far cheaper to do.
The truth, however, is otherwise: the Indian government has
given itself broad powers to censor the Internet and two days
after the July 11 Mumbai bombings used these powers in a completely
arbitrary and undemocratic manner, issuing secret orders to Internet
providers to block certain sites and pages, then refusing to publicly
reveal which sites it had banned or explain why it had ordered
them blocked.
Only after the passing of a more than a week and much public
pressure did the government issue a second order to the ISPs,
stipulating that they should block only the sites named in its
first order.
Government claims that the denial of access to much of the
Internet was an unexpected consequence of the ISPs trying to do
its bidding at the least cost to themselves are contradicted by
a senior official in the Information Technology Ministry, who
said, Indian ISPs dont have the technology to block
individual name serverssay, a particular blog hosted on
Blogspot. So they had no choice but to block the root servers
of major blogging networksBlogspot, Geocities and Typepad.
No less importantly, the Department of Telecommunications order
against the 17 sites and web pages stands and the government continues
to refuse to explain its actions, apart from suggesting that the
ban was issued to thwart communalist agitation in the wake of
the Mumbai bomb blasts.
Indian authorities have not laid any charges in the bombings,
which killed more than 180 people and injured some 700, but they
have said they believe the attack was carried out by operatives
of the Lashkar-e-Taiba, a movement opposed to Indian control of
Kashmir, and the Students Islamic Movement of India (SIMI) and
was facilitated by Pakistan.
Although this is reportedly the first time the Indian government
has targeted blogs (on-line journals), a rapidly expanding and
popular source of information and opinion, New Delhi regularly
orders web sites blocked or banned. One media estimate places
the number of banned sites in recent years, not including those
that were the target of this months ban, at almost 60. For
a time during the 1999 Kargil war, India ordered the online edition
of the liberal Pakistani daily Dawn blocked. The Yahoo
newsgroup of the Hynniewtrep National Liberation Council (HNLC),
a separatist-exclusivist group in the northeastern state of Meghalaya,
was banned in September 2003.
Under the Information Technology Act of 2000 and a federal
government notification of July 2003, the Indian government has
arrogated the power to ban web sites that it deems are harming
the sovereignty or integrity of India, the security
of the state, friendly relations with foreign states
and public order or that are inciting people to commit a
criminal offence.
An important role in policing the Internet is being played
by the little-known Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-IN),
the Indian branch of an international global cyber-security network.
Shivam Raj, a blogger and freelance journalist, told the Asian
Times Online, Although CERT-IN is meant to be primarily
concerned with Internet security, it often oversees censorship
under a legal clause that seeks to ensure balanced flow
of information.
As the government failed to inform the public of its ban on
the 17 web sites and pages, let alone explain the reasons for
their banning, knowledge of what had happened only came to light
when tens of thousands of blog-writers and their readers found
themselves unable to access their personal or favorite blogs.
According to the Business Standard At the last
count, over 42,000 bloggers on the Google-owned domain http://blogspot.com
called themselves Indian. Typepad.com, another popular
blog-hosting domain, had over 7,000 Indians on its site. And the
Yahoo!-owned geocities.com hosts over one lakh [100,000] Indian
homepages. These three domains normally draw 10 million Indian
eyeballs per day.
Outraged blog-writers, their readers and others concerned about
civil liberties demanded the government explain why it was disrupting
the Internet. Said cyber-law expert, Praveen Dalal: [The]
government decision could be in violation of provisions in the
Indian constitution that upholds the fundamental right to free
speech and expression, if it is found to be arbitrary, unreasonable
and unfair.
The governments attempt to shift the onus onto the ISPs
for what amounted to a blanket ban on many, if not most, of the
countrys most popular blog-sites is a patent attempt to
cover-up its own indifference and hostility to basic democratic
rights. In India, no less than the rest of the world, the Internet
has emerged as a vital means of popular communication and discourse.
No less egregious is the continuing ban on the 17 web sitesa
ban whose motivation and legal basis Indian authorities refuse
to discuss.
According to media reports, the sites and blogs that have been
banned are an odd mix. Two expound Hindu chauvinist views; other
are addressed to Muslims. Several more, including Exposingtheleft.blogspot.com,
are described by Reuters as containing conservative American
commentaries on the Middle East and the war on terror,
of a kind unlikely to stand out from thousands of others on the
Internet. Another, a personal journal rarely updated since
2004, appears to have little if any commentary pertaining to India
or South Asia.
The UPA governments dramatic assertion of the Indian
states powers to censor the Internet comes at a time when
it is under heavy pressure from the corporate media and the Bhratiya
Janata Party, Shiv Sena and their Hindu supremacist allies to
increase the size and powers of the security forces in the name
of fighting terrorism.
No quarter should be given to the governments attempt
to justify the suppression of web sites and web pages in the name
of preventing the stoking of communal antagonisms. In India it
is a crime to promote violence against any group.
Moreover, Indias national-security establishment and
the UPA government have themselves contributed to the stoking
of anti-Muslim sentiment in India, with their rush to proclaim
Islamicist organizations as the targets of their bombing investigation
and their accusations that Pakistan shares responsibility for
the Mumbai atrocity.
While the Congress, the dominant force in the UPA, has historically
opposed the Hindu supremacists call for India to be declared
a Hindu rashtra or Hindu state, it has a long history of
both conniving with communalist forcesNarayan Rane, the
former Shiv Sena Chief Minister of Maharashtra was recently welcomed
into the Congress leadershipand of using the fight against
the Hindu chauvinist right to justify antidemocratic measures
whose principal target is the working class (Indira Gandhis
Emergency.)
See Also:
Following Mumbai terror attack
India indefinitely postpones peace talks with Pakistan
[19 July 2006]
Hindu supremacists, media seize on Mumbai
atrocity to push Indias government further right
[14 July 2006]
Terrorist atrocity in Mumbai
[12 July 2006]
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