The UN General Assembly opened last week with an electrifying
 speech by President Dilma Rousseff who slammed US cyber-snooping 
activities with President Barack Obama in the audience.
INTERNET spying by the US government became a major issue at the 
United Nations General Assembly last week when political leaders heard a
 blistering attack by the Brazilian president who was visibly angry 
about how her country and her own office have been targets of 
cyber-snooping activities.
She called the US action a breach of international law, a grave 
violation of human rights and civil liberties, and a disrespect for 
national sovereignty.
It was condemnation in the strongest terms at the highest political 
forum in the world, with UN and commercial TV stations beaming the 
speech live.
The surveillance issue, which has caused ripples with continuous 
revelations in the media emerging from whistle-blower Edward Snowden’s 
files, has now reached the UN.
And in the most spectacular fashion. It was an extraordinary scene 
when President Dilma Rousseff gave the opening speech among the 
government leaders gathered for the annual General Assembly.
Traditionally, Brazil’s president speaks first, followed by the US 
president. Thus, Barack Obama could not avoid hearing her speech.
Many had expected Rousseff to touch on the Internet spying issue, 
since she had strongly criticised the US when the media broke the news 
on specific instances of US Internet surveillance on the Brazilian 
President’s office, other departments, including the Brazilian Mission 
to the UN, and the national oil company Petrobas. She recently cancelled
 a state visit to Washington.
But her speech and performance was far beyond what was anticipated. 
With the atmosphere electrifying in the packed hall of leaders, the 
Brazilian president cut out the usual diplomatic niceties while 
addressing one of the most sensitive issues to have emerged globally in 
recent years.
She called it “a matter of great importance and gravity ... the 
global network of electronic espionage that has caused indignation and 
repudiation in public opinion around the world.”
Rousseff described the Internet spying as creating “a situation of 
grave violation of human rights and of civil liberties; of invasion and 
capture of confidential information concerning corporate activities, and
 especially of disrespect to national sovereignty”.
She started by laying the foundation of her argument: “A sovereign 
nation can never establish itself to the detriment of another sovereign 
nation.
“The right to safety of citizens of one country can never be 
guaranteed by violating fundamental human rights of citizens of another 
country. The arguments that the illegal interception of information and 
data aims at protecting nations against terrorism cannot be sustained.”
She said she fought against authoritarianism and censorship, and thus
 has to uncompromisingly defend the right to privacy of individuals and 
the sovereignty of her country.
“In the absence of the right to privacy, there can be no true freedom
 of expression and opinion, and therefore no effective democracy. In the
 absence of the respect for sovereignty, there is no basis for the 
relationship among nations,” she added.
Her speech touched on three actions. First, Brazil had asked the US 
for explanations, apologies and guarantees that such procedures will 
never be repeated.
Second, Brazil is planning actions to defend itself from the spying. 
It will “adopt legislation, technologies and mechanisms to protect us 
from the illegal interception of communications and data”.
Third, she proposed international action, saying: “Information and 
telecommunication technologies cannot be the new battlefield between 
states. Time is ripe to create the conditions to prevent cyberspace from
 being used as a weapon of war, through espionage, sabotage, and attacks
 against systems and infrastructure of other countries.”
Stating that the UN must play a leading role to regulate the conduct 
of states with regard to these technologies, she called for the setting 
up of “a civilian multilateral framework for the governance and use of 
the Internet and to ensure the effective protection of data that travels
 through the web”.
She proposed multilateral mechanisms for the worldwide network, based
 on the principles of freedom of expression, privacy and human rights; 
open, multilateral and democratic governance; universality; cultural 
diversity; and neutrality of the network, guided only by technical and 
ethical criteria, with no restrictions allowed on political, commercial,
 religious grounds.
Delegates who hoped that Obama would respond were disappointed. He 
did not refer to the Brazilian president’s address made only a few 
minutes before.
He made only a passing reference to the issue, saying: “we are reviewing the way we gather intelligence.”
Rousseff’s speech came at the right time and venue, since people 
worldwide have been increasingly troubled or outraged by the extent of 
cyber-spying revealed by the media.
The issue is even more serious for developing countries. Media 
reports indicate that there are double standards, with the US spying 
programme requiring a special court procedure for opening data on 
individual US citizens, while there is no such procedure for residents 
outside the US, and thus the surveillance is comprehensive for the world
 outside the US, with the citizens, companies and government offices all
 being targets.
Moreover, the media reports show that the US actions do not stop at 
surveillance. There are also schemes to engage in cyber actions or 
attacks.
Rousseff’s speech at the UN indicates Brazil plans follow-up moves in
 the UN for setting up a multilateral system to regulate the use and 
misuse of the Internet. This would be a timely international response to
 the recent revelations.
Contributed by Global Trends, MARTIN KHOR
The views expressed are entirely the writer’s own. 
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Showing posts with label Internet spying. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Internet spying. Show all posts
Monday, September 30, 2013
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