In a bid to strengthen national security post September 11, both the West and some Asian countries, have introduced measures that threaten individual privacy, a new report has said.
Governments in both the developing and the developed
worlds are extending control over individuals to
reduce the risks of terrorist attacks, said the annual
"Privacy and Human Rights survey report" by Electronic
Privacy Information Center (EPIC), a public interest
research organization in Washington, and Privacy
International, a London-based human rights body.
"It may take some years to fully evaluate the effects
of September 11th 2001 on privacy and civil
liberties," the report said. "Shortly after the events
of that day, previous proposals were reintroduced,
and new policies with similar objectives were drafted
to extend police surveillance authority," it said.
The Privacy and Human Rights survey is an annual
exercise documenting measures that safeguard or
threaten privacy in the world. The 2002 report, which
deals with the impact of measures on privacy in over
50 countries, focuses on the effects of September 11,
2001, on privacy and civil liberties.
"It continues to be our hope that a careful
examination of how countries around the world respond
to new challenges, even those as horrific as September
11, will enable the safeguarding of privacy in the
years ahead," said EPIC executive director Marc
Rotenberg in a foreword to the report.
Privacy, the report stressed, was a fundamental human
right. "It underpins human dignity and other values
such as freedom of association and freedom of speech.
It has become one of the most important human rights
of the modern age... Privacy protection is frequently
seen as a way of drawing the line at how far society
can intrude into a person's affairs," it said.
Since September 11, anti-terrorism measures have been
introduced in western countries such as Canada,
Denmark, France, Australia, Germany, Austria, the
United Kingdom, the United States and Sweden. In Asia,
similar measures were taken in India and Singapore, the
report stated.
"Privacy has been attacked in various countries in
different ways," Privacy International director Simon
Davies told OneWorld Thursday. He pointed out that in
some countries such as the United States, while laws
were passed that impinged on privacy, there were
constitutional safeguards to protect privacy as
well.
Davies said that, on the basis of the equation between
constitutional safeguards and invasive law, the
countries that had lost the most privacy rights were
the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia.
Australia and Canada introduced laws to redefine
terrorist activity and to grant powers of surveillance
to their national security agencies. India passed an
anti-terrorism law last year that allowed, among other
things, security forces to detain suspects without a
trial.
In the United Kingdom, a law was passed in violation
of existing rules giving confidentiality to collection
data that allowed the authorities to access private
data for security reasons. In the United States,
several laws were passed, including one that increased
surveillance powers.
"Many of these proposals have had far-reaching
consequences for the protection of privacy," the
report said, adding that many more countries were
contemplating similar laws and measures. "New policies
are being proposed every week with the goal of
investigating, preventing, and suppressing terrorist
activity," it said.
Restrictions were imposed in many countries, including
members of the European Union, on communications to
enable governments to keep tabs on people using
telephones, mobiles or the Internet. In June 2002, the
European Union (EU) passed the Electronic
Communications Privacy Directive. It allowed EU member
to enact laws requiring Internet Service Providers,
and other telecommunications operators, to retain the
traffic and location data from mobile phones, text
messaging, land-line telephones, faxes, e-mails and so
on.
Belgium, France, Spain and the United Kingdom had
already introduced measures on accessing
telecommunication data, while similar proposals were
pending in the Netherlands and in New Zealand. In
China, the authorities could monitor all international
connections and identify individual users and
content.
Surveillance was also conducted with the use of cameras or
audio bugs, which were sold in millions every year in
Asian countries such as Hong Kong and Japan. The bugs,
used in many Asian countries to keep a check on
industrial espionage, were also planted in homes or in
offices.
The report said that surveillance cameras were
increasingly being used to monitor public and private
spaces throughout the world. The country leading in
this was the United Kingdom, which had some 1.5
million cameras watching public space. Surveillance of
public spaces had grown "markedly" in the United
States and Australia, it said.
"Several governments are now considering using
surveillance systems as an anti-terrorism tool," it
said. The report pointed out that the cameras were
being used in cities in the same way electricity and
telephone lines were in the first half of the last
century.
The 2002 report, however, found that efforts to pass
new data protection laws were continuing in Eastern
Europe, Asia and Latin America. "Important debates are
also taking place around the world concerning the
future of new technologies for identification and
surveillance," it said.
Copyright 2002 OneWorld.net
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