Source: Human Rights Watch
Threatens Peaceful Activists, Ordinary Citizens Alike
(Beirut) – A new federal decree on cybercrimes in the United Arab Emirates
effectively closes off the country’s only remaining forum for free
speech. The decree poses a serious threat to the liberty of peaceful
activists and ordinary citizens alike.
The UAE president, Sheikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, issued Federal
Legal Decree No. 5/ 2012 on combating cybercrimes on November 12, 2012.
The decree’s vaguely worded provisions provide a legal basis to
prosecute and jail people who use information technology to, among other
things, criticize senior officials, argue for political reform, or
organize unlicensed demonstrations. Although some provisions are aimed
at preventing the proliferation of racist or sectarian views online, the
principal effect of the law is severe restrictions on the rights to
free expression and free association and assembly.
“The UAE’s cybercrimes decree reflects an attempt to ban even the most tempered criticism,” said Joe Stork,
deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “The determination
to police and punish on-line dissent, no matter how mild, is
incompatible with the image UAE rulers are trying to promote of a
progressive, tolerant nation.”
The new decree addresses information technology, which it classifies as
“websites, any information network, or information technology means,”
and places severe restrictions on the use of blogs and social networking
sites, as well as text messages and emails. Given that it will be
applied together with provisions of the criminal code and media law that
criminalize alleged insults to the country’s rulers, the cybercrime law
marks a significant step backward when it comes to free speech, Human
Rights Watch said.
Article 28 provides for imprisonment and a fine of up to 1 million
dirhams (US$272,000) for anyone who uses information technology “with
the intent of inciting to actions, or publishing or disseminating any
information, news, caricatures, or other images liable to endanger state
security and its higher interests or infringe on the public order.”
Article 29 provides the same penalties for anyone using information
technology “with the intent of deriding or harming the reputation,
stature, or status of the state, any of its institutions, its president
or vice president, the rulers of the emirates, their crown princes or
their deputies, the state flag, national safety, its motto, its national
anthem, or its symbols.”
Article 30 provides a sentence of up to life in prison for anyone using
such means “to advocate the overthrow, change, or usurpation of the
system of governance in the state, or obstruct provisions of the
constitution or existing law, or oppose the fundamental principles on
which the system of governance is based.” It provides for the same
sentence for anyone who incites or facilitates these acts.
By enabling the authorities to imprison anyone who makes any critical
comment about the country or its rulers, the new decree is at odds with
international free speech standards, Human Rights Watch said. Those
standards require public officials to tolerate greater criticism than
ordinary citizens.
The decree also potentially violates the rights to peaceful assembly
and free association. Article 26 provides for a maximum of five years in
prison and a fine of 1 million dirhams (US$272,000) for anyone using
information technology in any of the activities associated with an
“unlawful” group. This includes “intent to facilitate contact between
its leaders or members, attract members, promote or applaud its ideas,
fund its activities, or provide active aid to it.”
Article 32 authorizes imprisonment or a fine of 500,000 dirhams
(US$136,000) for anyone using information technology to “plan, organize,
promote, or advocate demonstrations, marches, and the like without a
permit from the competent authorities.”
The decree follows the detention without charge of 63 peaceful
dissidents in recent months. The government also has forced UAE civil
society organizations and local offices of foreign pro-democracy groups
to close. The day UAE authorities issued the cybercrimes decree, the
families of 63 detainees gathered at the Supreme Court in Abu Dhabi to
protest the unlawful detention of their loved ones. Under the new
cybercrimes law anyone using information technology to organize a
similar peaceful protest risks five years in jail.
A particularly worrying aspect of the new cybercrimes law is article
38, which will prohibit Emiratis from providing information to
independent journalists and human rights organizations. Article 38
provides prison terms for anyone using information technology “who
provides to any organizations, institutions, agencies, or any other
entities incorrect, inaccurate, or misleading information liable to harm
state interests or damage its reputation, stature, or status.”
In the aftermath of the European Parliament’s October 26 resolutionon
the UAE’s deteriorating human rights situation, the authorities sought
to discredit the information provided to members of the European
parliament by independent rights organizations and defenders. This
provision will enable the authorities to sanction people it holds
responsible for unfavorable media articles or official reports, a threat
to Emiratis who speak with journalists or human rights researchers.
Citizen Lab, an interdisciplinary laboratory based at the University of
Toronto, recently reported that unknown parties hacked the computer of
Ahmed Mansoor, a human rights defender, using what industry experts call
“legal intercept tools.” Citizen Lab said they had traced the malware
back to a physical address in the UAE, registered as the corporate
headquarters of the Royal Group, whose chairman belongs to the ruling Al
Nahyan family.
The UAE authorities should take immediate steps to bring the cybercrime
law into line with international and regional standards on free speech,
Human Rights Watch said. The UAE has not ratified the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, article 19 of which outlines the
right to freedom of opinion and expression. But it is a state party to
the Arab Charter on Human Rights. Article 32 of the Arab Charter ensures
the right to information, freedom of opinion and freedom of expression,
and article 24 guarantees the right to freedom of political activity,
the right to form and join associations, and the right to freedom of
assembly and association.
“The UAE’s attitude toward free speech is regressing almost as quickly
as the technology that facilitates it is advancing,” Stork said. “The
new cybercrime law is the act of a government out of step and out of
touch with international norms.”