Seven Saudi Arabian activists jailed for peaceful protest via Facebook

by Darrin Simmons
Impunity Watch Reporter, Middle East

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia – The use of Facebook has recently caused problems for seven Saudi Arabian activists who received prison terms for inciting riots on the social network site.  The activists were held for a year and a half before being sentenced by a special tribunal handling terrorism related cases.

Facebook usage has led to seven Saudi activists being jailed for peaceful protest (photo courtesy of Aljazeera)

After the leading Shia cleric, Tawfiq al-Amer, was jailed for a year without trial beginning in 2011 for calling for a constitutional monarchy, the seven activists took to Facebook to express their support for al-Amer.

Each of the seven received varying amounts of jail time ranging from five to ten years.  The activist who set up the Facebook account received ten years for allegedly providing information on how to perform the best protesting techniques.

Human Rights Watch (HRW), a New York rights group, reported that the Saudi activists, who weren’t even charged with actively participating in the riots, have been subjected to a violation of their right to voice their opinion and hold a peaceful protest.

“Sending people off to years in prison for peaceful Facebook posts sends a strong message that there’s no safe way to speak out in Saudi Arabia, even on online social networks,” claimed the deputy Middle East director of HRW, Joe Stork.

The seven activists were banned from travelling for any additional periods of time and several of the them claimed that they were tortured into signing confessions, reported HRW.  The Saudi Interior Ministry has not been available to comment or make an official statement.

HRW also insisted that Catherine Ashton, European Union foreign policy chief, condemn the conviction as she and other European officials were attending a discussion in Bahrain with other members of the Gulf States.

Every activist is from East Province, an area that has experienced protests and disturbance amongst the minority Shi’ites who have alleged discrimination and negligence against the Riyadh government.

Major discontent amongst Shias and Shi’ites has been seen throughout Saudi Arabia with at least twenty people being killed by security forces since 2011.  Last Thursday, a protest was held at the funeral of a wanted man killed by the police with thousands gathering to express their dissent of the ruling al-Saud family.

Sebastian Usher, the BBC World Service’s Middle East editor, reported that the activists received their sentences because their case involved two highly controversial aspects that concern the Saudi Arabian government: “political criticism expressed online and protests staged by the Shia minority in the east of the country.”

One Saudi-based human rights campaigner said, “The sectarian situation in the region made the sentences tough and unreasonable.”  As tension increases among the sects, one wonders what freedom will next be taken away for the Saudi Arabian people.

For further information, please see the following: 

National – Seven Saudis jailed for up to a decade for protest call on Facebook – 1 Jul. 2013

Aljazeera – Saudis jailed for urging protests on Facebook – 30 Jun. 2013

BBC – Saudi Arabia court jails seven Facebook cyber activists – 30 Jun. 2013

Reuters – Seven Saudis jailed for urging protests on Facebook: HRW – 30 Jun. 2013

 

Bahrain Teenager Sentenced to One Year in Prison over a Tweet

By Kathryn Maureen Ryan
Impunity Watch Reporter, Middle East

MANAMA, Bahrain—A lower criminal court in Bahrain, led by a member of the Bahraini royal family, sentenced 17-year-old Ali Al Shofa to serve a year in prison for insulting remarks made about King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifah of Bahrain. According to The Bahrain Centre for Human Rights (BCHR), Ali Al Shofa was arrested in a house raid in March and held in jail for two months while his case was under investigation. The 17-year-old was accused of tweeting insulting comments about Sheikh Hamad Al-Khalifa on the Twitter Account @alkawarahnews. He denied any relationship with this account and his lawyer submitted evidence that despite his client’s lack of access to the web the account was still being run by other people.

Ali Al Shofa, age 17, was sentenced to a year in prison for allegedly insulting the king. (Photo courtesy of Al Jazeera)

The sentencing appears to be a part of a wider crackdown on freedom of speech in Bahrain which has been occurring since the Arab Spring spread to the region in 2011.Earlier this year five Bahraini men were tried separately for allegedly insulting the Bahraini ruler via Twitter, each was sentenced to serve a year in prison. 25-year-old Bahraini lawyer Mahdi al-Basri, was arrested after the police conducted a raid on his home in Karrana. 34-year-old Mahmood ‘Abdul-Majeed ‘Abdullah Al-Jamri, 33-year-old Hassan ‘Abdali ‘Issa, 26-year-old Mohsen ‘Abdali ‘Issa, 36-year-old and ‘Ammar Makki Mohammad Al-Aali, 36, were all detained the day after Mahdi al-Basri’s arrest a day later. The Five men were sentenced to one year imprisonment on May 15, 2013.Mahdi al-Basri was accused of tweeting insulting Twitter messages in June 2012 on an account that was allegedly traced back to his IP address. He has denied all charges and argues that the tweets he was accused of posting were not tweeted from his personal Twitter account.

Amnesty Internati0onal has called for the immediate release of the accused men.  Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, Middle East and North Africa Deputy Director at Amnesty International said “The authorities in Bahrain seem to be using every trick in the book to stop people from expressing their views.”

Amnesty International has argued that two years after the uprising in Bahrain, despite the government’s claims of having implemented reforms aimed at addressing the concerns of the Bahraini people, Bahrain has begun to further crack down on freedom of expression. On April 14, 2013 the country’s cabinet endorsed an amendment to Article 214 of the Penal Code. The amendment increases the penalty for insulting King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifah, the country’s flag and other national symbols. The Amendment would make any insulting comment mad about the king or notational symbols punishable by steep fines and up to five years in prison.

The United States Department of State issued a report in April 2013 which claimed that the situation in Bahrain has not improved since the uprising two years ago. The Report said that “the most serious human rights problems included citizens’ inability to change their government peacefully” the report alleged that protesters are often detained on vague charges which in some cases have let to torture in prisons.

Albawaba – Bahrain Student Sentenced for Insulting King on Twitter – 30 June 2013

Al Jazeera – Bahrain Student Sentenced for Insulting King – 29 June 2013

Amnesty International – Bahrain Must Release Twitter Users Jailed for Allegedly Insulting the King – 16 May 2013

Al Jazeera – Bahrain Rejects US Report on Human Rights – 25 April 2013

Europe and US Continue to Draw the Line on Privacy Rights

By Ben Kopp
Impunity Watch Reporter, Europe

BRUSSELS, European Union – The European community has related US surveillance to Cold War behavior that threatens privacy and trade agreements. Simultaneously, the EU’s highest court vetoed the “right to be forgotten” when it comes to Google and other entities that are not “controllers” of information.

Europe calls for deleting US surveillance while the EU deletes “the right to be forgotten.” (Photo courtesy of BBC News)

On June 6, Edward Snowden revealed Prism and Tempora, US and UK surveillance programs that received mass data from several companies operating with similar capacities in both the US and Europe.

Through Tempora, the UK taps into approximately 200 cables that connect Britain to the global internet. While holding content for three days and metadata for thirty days, British and US authorities filtered everything to discover information of interest. Additionally, Britain is considered one of the world leaders in CCTV, which monitors public spaces.

Professor Richard J. Aldrich of Warwick University in Britain said, “It’s about what the CIA calls the electronic exhaust fumes of our lives, and the algorithms that allow patterns to be found.”

While the US generally considers privacy a matter of liberty, the European Convention on Human Rights and UK’s Human Rights Act require European countries to respect the right to private life.

In response to the programs, EU officials demanded more details as assurances that fundamental privacy rights were not violated.

European countries issued various responses, based on their legal and historical philosophies. Germany has been particularly sensitive about its citizens’ privacy since the Soviet Era. Previously, Germany has forced Google to allow citizens to blur their own homes on “Street View” of Google Maps. France, Italy and Greece also expressed outrage upon learning that they were targets of US surveillance. Nevertheless, no country has granted Snowden asylum.

In a state visit by US President Barack Obama to Germany, President Obama and German Chancellor Angela Merkel agreed on the benefits of sharing surveillance and intelligence. “Although we do see the need for information gathering,” said Chancellor Merkel, “there needs to be due diligence.”

Frank La Rue, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Freedom of Expression and Opinion urged countries to consider communications surveillance as “a highly intrusive act that potentially interferes with the rights to freedom of expression and privacy and threatens the foundations of a democratic society.”

Nevertheless, on June 25, the EU’s highest court ruled against the European “right to be forgotten” on the internet. In that case, a Spanish man complained that Google refused to delete the auction for his repossessed house from searches. Google argued that there are “clear societal reasons why this kind of information should be publicly available.”

Advocate General Niilo Jääskinen stated in his opinion that “[r]equesting search engine service providers to suppress legitimate and legal information that has entered the public domain would entail an interference with the freedom of expression.”

Where Britain, through the BBC, could make surveillance of “legitimate and legal information” part of the public domain and argue that both national security and government transparency require the information’s availability, the lines marking the reasonableness of secret and confidential surveillance are blurred.

For further information, please see:

CNN International – Snowden’s Asylum Options Dwindle – 2 July 2013

Al Jazeera – Bugging row threatens EU-US trade deal – 1 July 2013

Al Jazeera – UK Surveillance Exposes Lack of Privacy – 28 June 2013

Reuters – German Minister Challenges Britain over Spying Program – 26 June 2013

BBC News – Google Not Obliged to Delete Data, Rules EU Lawyer – 25 June 2013

The Independent – EU Court Rules in Google’s Favour: ‘Right to be Forgotten’ – 25 June 2013

Reuters – UPDATE 1-Google Vindicated by EU Court Opinion on Search Index – 25 June 2013

Reuters – UPDATE 2-Google Vindicated by EU Court Opinion on Search Results – 25 June 2013

New York Times – Obama Says Surveillance Helped in Case in Germany – 19 June 2013

The Sydney Morning Herald – Germany Widens Its Web of Surveillance – 17 June 2013

New York Times – Differing Views on Privacy Shape Europe’s Response to U.S. Surveillance Program – 14 June 2013

Bloomberg Businessweek – Europeans Ask if Prism Has Been Spying on Them, Too – 11 June 2013

The Guardian – Europe Warns US: You Must Respect the Privacy of Our Citizens – 11 June 2013

The Guardian – Prism Scandal: European Commission to Seek Privacy Guarantees from US – 10 June 2013

Vatican Cleric, Secret Service Officer Implicated in $26 Million Vatican Bank Scandal; Leads Bank Director, Deputy to Resign

by Tony Iozzo
Impunity Watch Reporter, Europe

ROME, Italy – The director of the Vatican bank and his deputy resigned Monday amidst a financial scandal that has led to a prelate and an Italian Secret Service Officer being arrested by Italian authorities.

The Vatican bank finds itself marred by a large financial scandal. (Photo courtesy of BBC news)

The prelate, Monsignor Nunzio Scarano, the bishop of Salerno, and the secret service agent, Giovanni Maria Zito, were detained after an investigation arising out of a three-year examination into the Vatican Bank.

Italian prosecutors allege that the men planned to sneak $26 million into Italy and avoid facing financial controls on the money. They allegedly hired a private plane last July with the intention of bringing the cash from Switzerland to Italy, where the money was to be picked up by Zito, who, by virtue of his position as a Secret Service Agent, would not be required to declare it at the border.

According to reports, Scarano needed the money to pay off a personal mortgage, and was advised to ask 56 friends to accept 10,000 euros each to launder the money and inconspicuously hide it.

The Vatican bank, known as the Institute for Religious Works (IOR), saw its director, Paolo Cipriani, as well as its deputy director, Massimo Tulli, step down “in the best interest of the institute and the Holy See,” the Vatican said in a statement.

The IOR has been under strict scrutiny amid concerns that it was being used as an offshore tax haven. It has undergone drastic changes in an effort to adhere to international norms to fight money laundering and terror financing. The “old guard” management of the bank did not always whole-heartedly conform to the scrutiny, and Monday’s resignations represent a final overthrow of the “old guard” management.

The European Union and the United States have notified countries that they would no longer tolerate tax havens such as Switzerland and Luxembourg. Pope Francis and Pope Benedict XVI have tried to bring the bank into compliance with European norms so that it can use the euro. As such, the Vatican has been complying with investigators on the case, which has largely been unprecedented its history as a sovereign entity.

In years past, the Vatican has refused to assist in investigations into a murder, a kidnapping, and an assassination attempt on Pope John Paul II.

“This time the collaboration is real, and the Vatican has announced that it would do its own internal investigation,” a Turin reporter indicated.

A commission of cardinals was appointed by Pope Francis that will report on further activities of the IOR and collect both confidential and non-confidential information on the bank.

For more information, please see:

BBC News – Vatican Bank Director and Deputy Resign Amid Scandal – 1 July 2013

Yahoo News – Vatican Bank Director, Deputy Resign Amid Scandal – 1 July 2013

Al Jazeera – Vatican Cleric Arrested in Corruption Case – 28 June 2013

Corriere – Prelate and Secret Service Officer Arrested in Vatican Bank Inquiry – 28 June 2013

New York Times – Cleric Arrested in $26 Million Bank Plot, Leaving New Blot on Vatican Bank – 28 June 2013