Darkness
in Syria - Internet Shut Down
Syria
has cut its citizens off from the rest of the world by entirely
shutting down its internet as well as most mobile and landline
connections, according to news reports and technical analyses by
Renesys and Akamai.
30
November, 2012
Access
believes that a total interruption of the internet and
telecommunications services is completely unjustifiable, a breach of
international law, and always causes serious harm to the public.
Syrian authorities should restore service immediately. Any private
companies facilitating the shutdown must take immediate action to
remedy the human rights impact of cessation of communications
services, first and foremost, by restoring service. Companies (and
governments) have a responsibility to respect human rights and
redress grievances under the UN Guiding Principles on Business and
Human Rights.
While
information about the actual execution of the shutdown is still
coming out, all telecommunications providers in the country connect
through the Syrian Telecommunications Establishment, controlled by
the Syrian Ministry of Communication and Technology. Indeed, they are
reputed to share a building, so shutting off communications may have
been as simple as walking down a hallway and telling the routers to
stop announcing their IP addresses, a metaphorical if not actual
pulling of the plug.
This
isn’t the first time the Syrian regime has shut down
communications. Access has received reports from on the ground
activists that mobile provider MTN Syria’s networks have gone down
in towns just before the Syrian military laid siege to the blacked
out areas over the past months.
(https://www.accessnow.org/blog/access-confronts-telco-mtn-for-neglecting-human-rights)
Moreover,
the drastic step of a wide-scale shutdown is not without precedent
either, as Egypt, Burma, and others have shut down national access to
the internet during times of unrest. After the Egyptian uprising, we
warned that President Mubarak’s order, which Vodafone and other
providers complied with, would give more authoritarian regimes the
green light to request shutdowns by telecommunications companies.
Only through international condemnation and real consequences against
officials, including criminal proceedings against those ordering the
unlawful shutdowns, will other governments and telecoms heed the
message of Article 19 of the ICCPR: all people have the right to
seek, receive, and impart information regardless of frontiers.
But
more than these violations of international law, we fear the human
rights abuses that are likely being perpetrated by the Syrian regime,
which cannot be documented and shared with the world under the
darkness of this communications blackout. Worryingly, Reuters has
already reported
(http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/11/29/us-syria-crisis-idUSBRE8AJ1FK20121129)
that the Syrian army has begun a “cleansing operation” in the
capital to confront rebel advances, citing an anonymous Syrian
security source.
It
is incumbent on the Syrian regime, along with the country’s
communications operators Tata, Deutsche Telekom, the Chinese PCCW,
Turk Telekom, Telecom Italia, Syriatel, and MTN Syria to restore all
communications immediately. We further urge the international
community to speak out and marshall all possible resources for the
defense of the Syrian people.
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