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Iceland Set to Become a Press Freedom Haven
After Iceland's near-economic collapse laid bare deep-seated corruption, the country aims to become a safe haven for journalists and whistleblowers from around the globe by creating the world's most far-reaching freedom of information legislation.
Icelandic Parliament unanimously voted for resolution protecting journalists. The project is being developed with the help of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
It flies in the face of a growing tendency of governments trying to stifle a barrage of secret and sometimes embarrassing information made readily available by the internet.
On 16 June a unanimous parliament voted in favour of the Icelandic Modern Media Initiative, a resolution aimed at protecting investigative journalists and their sources.
'We took all the best laws from around the world and pulled them together, just like tax havens do, in order to create freedom of information and expression, a transparency haven,' Birgitta Jonsdottir, the member of parliament behind the initiative, said.
Describing herself as an 'anarchist', the 43-year-old said she had decided to get into politics to seize the opportunities to change the system in Iceland following its dramatic financial collapse at the end of 2008.
Ms Jonsdottir was shocked to witness the attempts at censorship in her country, which had long been held up as a model democracy.
In the most resounding example, a court injunction in August 2009 forced Icelandic public broadcaster RUV to back down at the last minute from transmitting a report on one of the country's three largest banks that all collapsed less than a year earlier, pushing Iceland to the verge of bankruptcy.
Instead of its report on the Kaupthing bank's loanbook, RUV broadcast images from whistleblower site WikiLeaks, which had published the incriminating documents, in an attempt to draw attention to the limits being put on freedom of expression in Iceland.
'Freedom of information and freedom of speech are the pillars of democracy. Now, if you don't have that, you don't really have a democracy,' said Ms Jonsdottir, wearing 'Free Tibet' and 'Wikileaks' pins on her jacket.
Blaming the threat of terrorism, 'all countries are facing new sets of laws which are making it more difficult in particular for investigative journalists and book writers,' she said.
The aspiring 'island of transparency' aims to strengthen source protection, encourage whistleblowers to leak information and help counter so-called 'libel tourism', which consists in dragging journalists before foreign courts in countries with laws that best suit the prosecution.
The idea is to imitate and combine the existing most far-reaching laws in countries renowned for their freedom of expression, like the US, Sweden and Belgium.
'I don't think that there is anything radical in (IMMI). The radicalism around it is to pull these laws together,' Jonsdottir said.
'We have seen that really (such protections) are necessary', said WikiLeaks founder Assange, whose name became known after his site last month published nearly 77,000 classified US military documents on the war in Afghanistan.
'That's our experience in the developing world and in most developed countries: that the press is being routinely censored by abusive legal actions', he said recently in a video posted on Youtube.
Mr Assange, who spends much of his time in Iceland and other countries where the legislation is more in his favour, created WikiLeaks' first global scoop in Reykjavik earlier this year.
Locked up for weeks at a time in a house in the Icelandic capital, he and a handful of other WikiLeaks supporters managed to decrypt and post online a military video showing a US military Apache helicopter strike in Baghdad in 2007 that killed two Reuters employees and a number of other people.
WikiLeaks along with a number of non-governmental organisations and international celebrities like European member of parliament Eva Joly have contributed to developing IMMI.
Journalists in Iceland and abroad have applauded the initiative.
'By offering tight protection to the sources, it will be a lot safer to report on abuses in the government or in the corporate community,' said Wikileaks insider and Icelandic freelance reporter Kristinn Hrafnsson.
'When you know you can pass on information safely, you're more prone to do it,' he said.
But the resolution will also have implications beyond Iceland's borders.
'In countries where they are oppressed such as China and Sri Lanka, journalists risk their lives,' Ms Jonsdottir said.
'We can't help them with that, but at least we can ensure that their stories won't be removed' from the internet, by posting them on servers located in Iceland where the censors cannot get at them, she said.
According to Ms Jonsdottir, it will take about a year-and-a-half - the estimated time required to change at least 13 existing laws - before IMMI will go into effect.
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50 Comments so far
Show AllVery good news indeed! I hope this effort is successful.
When she says "...countries renowned for their freedom of expression, like the US, Sweden and Belgium." she is surely being ironic, especially in the case of the US, otherwise Assange and others wouldn't have to need refuge in Iceland.
The US laws guaranteeing freedom of expression themselves are strong, it's jsut their implementation is poor. The freedom of speech means nothing without equal access to the "means of speech" - the media.
The determining factor in the US is: HOW MUCH EXPRESSION CAN YOU AFFORD ?
Exacttly!
But you are always free to grumble and complain to yourself while waiting for the bus.
Is that ramshakle building in the picture their actual Parliament house?
The whole country has only 300,000 people. How much of a parliament house do the need?
True, but I looked up other pictures, and this is mostly just picture taken from an very unflattering angle and camera setting that makes it look like an old 2-room schoolhouse in a cow pasture.
Iceland - a REAL democracy! One more nationality that I wish I was born, instead of a USAn. What a curse to have been born here. But then again, If the die was cast again, I would more likely be alrady dead from overwork in a Chinese sweatshop.
This is just my opinion, but I am currently living in "factory alley" in southern China. And, I am not working for any company, nor do I represent any company. There are thousands of factories here and I am quite sure there are some of the factories with horrible conditions. But, many of the factory workers are very content. Last night (Friday), the streets were full of happy young people - it was FRIDAY NIGHT.
Don't buy into all of the media hype that every factory in China is a hell-hole. In the early 1980's, I worked in a factory in America. I hired on as a supervisor for $225/week with no benefits. I often worked in excess of 80 hours a week. Not exactly paradise.
Don't see it stopping the u.s. from kidnapping and rendering someone even from such a 'haven' to a country that loves to torture people. The u.s. military and covert intelligence worlds are very adept at that. So those who seek security there best 'watch your back' because the u.s. don't recognize 'safe zones'.
Indeed-- I began to wonder about Mr. Assange when he continued to fly hither and yon, speaking out in public between flights. Meantime hemming & hawing from Brass on the Sunday yak shows back in the USA.. has U.S. intel suddenly lost its nerve as re "renditioning" whomever they damn well please.. and perfectly capable of disiappearing them without a trace?
My wonderment was rather bolstered by evidence discussed by someone far more familiar with such matters than me.. Webster Tarpley, on the show you should all be tuning in weekly:
"Guns and Butter"
http://kpfa.org/archive/id/63211
(WBAI is also airing it these days I think.. not sure if they delay the episodes though. )
http://archive.wbai.org
..plus, Wikileaks begs for contributions (a database of credit cards could bolster one's motive suspicions?) and have just spewed out a 1.5gigabyte glob of encrypted data.. "insurance" they call it.. interesting concept, but I just heard yesterday I think it was on Alex Jones' show (http://stream.nfowars.net) that U.S. military are being told that downloading (even looking at?) wikileaks content will get them a Dishonorable Discharge in short order.. so I found that a bit disconcerting.
"...downloading (even looking at?) wikileaks content will get them a Dishonorable Discharge in short order..."
That makes a lot of sense given that the things they are worried about people in the military looking at are 1.) common knowledge to everyone in the military, 2.) mirrored on other sites, and 3.) not even classified at high level of secrecy and produced internally by the military for general use. They are probably using "collateral murder" (produced by our Ms Jonsdottir, and currently having more than 7M hits on youtube) as a training video: "be sure to turn off the radio before you high-five each other after the kill, otherwise civilians will think you're a bit off."
By the way, before other commentators jump on you for citing Webster Tarpley and Guns and Butter, you should know that most people on this message board accept the offical 9-11 commission report as the truth (they wouldn't want to reopen the inquiry, say with a different group of investigators, even if it might restore civil liberties and stop 2 wars). They think that Webster Tarpley is a kook for suggesting anything is suspicious about Assange.
The only thought(s) you are allowed to have here about Assange is that he is a hero. Anything else will start a flame war and you will be subject to endless snideness and name-calling.
I don't believe Roosevelt was responsible for bombing Pearl Harbor,nor do I think JFK was the victim of a CIA plot with some help from the Mafia.I don't think the gummint flew those planes into the World Trade Center. Bobby Kennedy was definitely killed by the guy who's in jail for his murder, but I do join the conspiracy theorists in the matter of Martin Luther King. On the other hand, I do believe Assange is working for the CIA. Don't you?
It is interesting to know what you believe and don't believe ricardohead. Thanks for your response.
You must be talking about the comments to "Wikileaks says it won't be Threatened by Pentagon." (headline article from August 14, 2010)
Here are some of the very thoughtful things you said on the thread:
"Your knee is obviously going spastic over my observations."
"You're throwing around slurs and idiotic assumptions that are worthy of a Drudge website. Oh, sorry to knock another website that you probably find credible. "
"Dude, you're getting as a convoluted as a pretzel with some of your accusations and certifiably paranoid..."
"Look asshole,..."
"I know shit when I smell it and you're releasing it prolifically."
"And hone in your reading comprehension skills to at least a third grade level..."
"I don't give a flying fuck about your twisted interpretations, or whatever your response might be cause I'm not even reading it! "
"I'm not taking back one single word of profanity I directed towards you --though I'll have to admit in retropspect, it was just too kind..."
I contributed to Wikileaks. They use paypal (alternatively by SWIFT transfer), the payments themselves going to a fourth party with no identification as "wikileaks". so WL has NO access to CC or bank account numbers.
I encourage everyone to send them a donation.
...and please don't read http://cryptome.org/0001/wikileaks-audit.htm ( or http://cryptome.org/0001/wikileaks-buck.htm ) before giving generously.
Thank you!
Dear thorsteinbevlen:
I like that THOR is on your name. However, I think you're "hammering" the wrong people. ( see sabocats comment re: donations!) Thank you for the information via the military that any who views wikileaks will receive a dishonorable discharge. OMG! The military has just provided the anti-war movement with the best news ever!
Troops, if you want to come home, view wikileaks! Thank you military, FINALLY we can start to end these wars! What if they gave a war but everyone was dishonorably discharged? As far as I'm concerned, "dishonorably discharged" should refer to the person and rifle that shot Pat Tillman!
Oh, since Bradley Manning is accused of viewing and submitting information to wikileaks, then I guess he's been dishonorably discharged too. I suppose that he'll have to be in a civilian court now....after all he's not in the military!
Oh yeah, Guns & Butter-conspiracy theory all day, every day.I heard Webster Tarpley last week (you can't make up a name like that), and I'm convinced he's a CIA plant.He thinks Wikileaks is run out of Langley and M 15.Never forget perfidious Albion.In fact, he thinks everything in the world is run by these guys.He sure is a funny dude...which is why I think he works for the CIA.
This is good news. Now let's see how open they are to investigative journalism on the events of 9/11.
Indeed. I would really like to see someone drop some inside documents about 9/11 on Wikileaks.
Do you think they'd publish them if they got them?
I do not think that idea is that far fetched considering that Wikileaks showed a video on the Internet which revealed a U.S. helicopter slaughtering 12 Iraqi citizens. If they were intimidated by the United States it is highly doubtful if they would have risked the wrath of the Obama administration by showing that U.S. helicopter engaging in a war crime against those Iraqi civilians and the two Reuters employees who were killed by U.S. firepower.
Well, nothing helpful has been published so far, and Assange is against the 911 truth movement, so I wonder.
I'm not against the 911 truth movement, but it would help if the word 'truth' were dropped from its name, because it suggests a foregone conclusion, that is that those who belong to the movement know the truth, whereas everyone else is smoking crack. A free and open investigation would surely reveal some things we don't know-most likely profound incompetence, of which there have been some hints, but I doubt that it would establish government complicity. But hey, as Dubya used to say,bring it on.
The meaning that I attach to the term 9/11 truth movement is not that they know the truth but rather that they are SEEKING the truth which is a far cry from the official fairy tale that has been put forth by the Bush/Cheney administration as that mendacious regime had lied about practically everything that they had attempted to peddle to the American people.
The idea is to imitate and combine the existing most far-reaching laws in countries renowned for their freedom of expression, like the US, Sweden and Belgium.
You can scratch the USA off that list.
The US has good laws regarding defamation. In England, everyone is always going about suing each other for "defamation." That doesn't happen so much here. Also, at least compared to most of the world's countries, the US does OK when it comes to publishing sexually explicit matter. Many countries forbid that sort of thing.
Yeah but the limeys are a much less litigious lot in general.And yes, the US does great when it comes to publishing sexually explicit material. Whoopie shit for that.
Iceland had better start a nuclear weapons acquisition program because once the laws allow transparency for worldwide dissemination of information the US will invade and occupy the country. They won't do it if Iceland has nukes. Go for it Icelanders!
Transparency for worldwide dissemination of information IS a nuclear treat for the US.
This news gives hope. The freedom of speech and freedom of press in the US is going down the drain. And so is the freedom of Americans.
The only freedom we have is the freedom of the oligarchy to commit further crimes against the American people and against humanity in general.
Perhaps I should move to Iceland. That country is certainly looking more and more appealing, especially when compared to the growing fascist empire of my current country, the United States.
I just hope they wouldn't make me listen to Bjork all the time.
When will the US declare war on Iceland and bomb them to smithereens?
They'll probably just cut their internet fiber cables and disrupt their satellite connections. Then they'll blame it on sharks, shoddy workmanship and atmospheric disturbances.
They will probably pour Corexit inside Katla volcano.
"WikiTRUTH "
from stardust
For the little nation state that could,
surrounded by the sea.
This island and this nation small
preserves our LIBERTY.
"Truth is beauty, beauty truth,"
as once the poet penned.
Transparency is TRUTH reknown,
Humanity's best friend.
This island small, of great fire power,
volcano showed the way.
In fire and ash, it stopped the world,
and earthbound man would stay.
Those nations armored up in might,
where people matter not,
Their lies of commerce, war tunes too,
and parlor tricks are caught!
It matters not those secret smiles
their hands are bloodied red.
But Wikileaks, their light shines bright
and cuts the darkness dead.
For Freedom is not merely words,
or platitudes in speech.
For TRUTH's the gift of humankind,
that darkness we must breach!
In ancient times, the world believed
the worthy passed the test,
and found a nation of delight,
The Island of the Blessed.
So, Iceland, now I say to you,
as nations rise and fall.
YOU are that sacred island space,
where TRUTH, it serves us all.***
Ah, "God is TRUTH!"
But beware O Little Iceland, The United States has HAARP and planes, in the skies, releasing "Chemtrails" and no one can claim that man can control weather.....Beware O Little Iceland.
Henry Kissinger once said, "We can not allow the people to choose their leaders." He then sent his minions out to assassinate leaders who would not submit to American Control....Henry and Zbigniew Brzezinski's clubs: The Council on Foreign Relations, Trilateral Commission, and Bilderberg Club still are making decisions for all of us!
So, beware O Little Iceland.....although "God is Truth", "Money is Power"!
Hooray for Iceland!!!!!!!
reading so, far :
"Dizi August 19th, 2010 10:36 pm
When will the US declare war on Iceland and bomb them to smithereens?"
Exactly what I thought. !
Go Iceland! Shoe the hypocrites in the US and elsewhere for what they are.
gnken
I want to move to Iceland.
No you don't: it's cold, it has no trees, and there are more sheep than people, and it could blow up at any moment.But I admire what they're doing.
Sounds as though Iceland is turning into a rather progressive country. I guess I'll have to go there & spend a few dollars to help the Iceland economy.
Are there any Iceland exports we can buy, besides sweaters?
Money talks. Boycott Israel and their exports.
Too much mischief is being covered in the name of "fighting terrorism". Is 'terrorism' really being fought or is it just a ruse to keep us, the people, docile as sheep?