U.S. Report Criticizes Tajikistan, Turkey On Religious Rights

An annual U.S. government report is adding U.S. ally Turkey as well as Tajikistan to a list of the worst violators of religious rights.

The report to be released on March 20 by the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) cites Turkey for «systematic and egregious limitations» on religious liberty.

Turkey and Tajikistan are among a total of 16 nations listed by the commission as countries of particular concern.

The Turkish ambassador to Washington, Namik Tan, dismissed the commission’s action as unjustified.

«Any unbiased eye will immediately realize that that’s not where Turkey belongs in the USCIRF annual report,» Tan told The Associated Press.

Among other problems, the report criticizes Turkey for regulating non-Muslim groups by restricting how they can train clergy, offer education, and own their places of worship.

Congress established the commission in 1998 to compile the reports for use by the president, the secretary of state, and lawmakers. Aside from Turkey and Tajikistan, the report also listed Myanmar, North Korea, Egypt, Eritrea, Iran, Iraq, Nigeria, Pakistan, China, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Vietnam.

While the commission recommends action the U.S. government should take to encourage improvements in religious freedom in the various countries, the State Department usually narrows down the list to a smaller group it cites for particular concern in its own annual report on religious freedom. Those countries can be subject to sanctions.

Based on AP reports

http://www.rferl.org/content/tajikistan_turkey_religious_rights/24521456.html

Scholarships — The Dag Hammarskjцld Fund for Journalists

Scholarship / Financial aid: the cost of travel and accommodations, as well as a per diem allowance offered

Date: 2012

Deadline: March 30, 2012

Open to: professional journalists from developing countries

The Dag Hammarskjцld Fund for Journalists is now accepting applications from professional journalists from developing countries for its 2012 fellowship program. The application deadline is Friday, March 30, 2012.

The fellowships are available to radio, television, print and web journalists, age 25 to 35, from developing countries who are interested in coming to New York to report on international affairs during the 67th session of the United Nations General Assembly. The fellowships will begin in early September and extend to late November and will include the cost of travel and accommodations in New York, as well as a per diem allowance.

The fellowship program is open to journalists who are native to one of the developing countries in Africa, Asia, South America and the Caribbean, and are currently working full-time for a bona fide media organization in a developing nation. Applicants must demonstrate an interest in and commitment to international affairs and to conveying a better understanding of the United Nations to their readers and audiences. They must also have approval from their media organizations to spend up to two months in New York to report from the United Nations. Click here for full eligibility criteria and documentation requirements and the fellowship application form.

In an effort to rotate recipient countries, the Fund will not consider journalist applications for 2012 from nations selected in 2011: China, Ethiopia, India and Nigeria. Journalists from these countries may apply in 2013.

Four journalists are selected each year after a review of all applications. The journalists who are awarded fellowships are given the incomparable opportunity to observe international diplomatic deliberations at the United Nations, to make professional contacts that will serve them for years to come, to interact with seasoned journalists from around the world, and to gain a broader perspective and understanding of matters of global concern. Many past fellows have risen to prominence in their professional and countries. The program is not intended to provide basic skills training to journalists, as all participants are media professionals.

Questions about the program, eligibility and application process can be directed to fellowship@unjournalismfellowship.org.

Website: http://unjournalismfellowship.org/node/564
Email: fellowship@unjournalismfellowship.org

http://unjournalismfellowship.org/node/564

Belarus Added To 2012 List Of ‘Enemies Of The Internet’

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has added Belarus to its list of «Enemies of the Internet.»

In a report issued on March 11 to mark World Day Against Cyber-Censorship, the Paris-based media watchdog said Belarusian authorities tightened their grip on the Internet over the past year to curb what it called «revolution via the social media.»

The report said President Alyaksandr Lukashenka’s government arrested some Internet users and bloggers and cut off access to websites in response to growing discontent bolstered by an unprecedented economic crisis. It also used Twitter to send messages aimed at intimidating demonstrators.

«The Internet was blocked during the series of ‘silent protests.’ We saw an increase of the filtering as well, with more and more websites rendered inaccessible and some websites the victims of cyberattacks,» RSF spokeswoman Lucie Morillon told RFE/RL. «Plus, there’s a lot of Internet users and bloggers who were arrested. We also saw another law which took effect in early January which gives the regime more Internet surveillance and control powers.»

RSF’s 2012 list of «Internet Enemies» includes 12 countries, among them Iran, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and Syria.

These countries combine cybercensorship with Internet access restrictions, tracking of cyberdissidents, and online propaganda.

Bahrain Also Added

Bahrain was this year’s other addition to the list of «Internet Enemies.» Following protests inspired by the Arab Spring, authorities in the tiny Gulf kingdom implemented an effective news blackout that involved arresting bloggers and Internet users — one of whom died in detention — and disrupting communications.

The report notes that Iran announced the launch of a national Internet and helped Syria hack into social networks to collect information about users’ activities as part of Damascus’ bloody crackdown on protests.

Two countries, Kazakhstan and India, were also singled out for their worsening Internet freedom and placed «under surveillance.»

The RSF report accused Indian authorities of stepping up Internet surveillance since the Mumbai bombings of 2008.

Kazakhstan was blamed for «turning its back on all its fine promises» made in 2010, the year it held the rotating presidency of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

«In 2011, we saw a social protest movement that was dealt with very violently by the authorities,» Morillon said. «I’m talking about the situation that happened when the oil workers’ strike actually resulted in an uprising. Authorities decided to completely cut the Internet around the area, which was unprecedented. This was followed by the blocking of news websites. And in December, a decree was adopted that increased the repression and surveillance at cyber cafes, for instance.»

Positive Trends Noted

Countries «under surveillance» include Egypt, Russia, Turkey, Thailand and, interestingly, France, where authorities continue to enforce stringent measures against illegal downloading and have taken recent steps to filter Internet traffic.

According to RSF, Internet freedom globally receded in 2011, largely due to crackdowns in response to the increasing use of the Internet and social networks as tools for protests.

But its «Enemies of the Internet» report did note positive trends in several countries.

In Myanmar, the military junta released some bloggers and unblocked news websites as part of an apparent thaw.

The media watchdog also welcomed a relaxing of Internet restrictions in Venezuela, where a 2011 law feared to limit Internet freedom has so far proved harmless, and in Libya, where the overthrow of Muammar Qaddafi ended an era of Internet censorship.

RSF removed both countries from its list of nations «under surveillance.»

Claire Bigg, RFE/RL

Источник: http://www.rferl.org/content/belarus_enemies_of_the_internet/24512829.html

OSCE media representative calls on Tajik authorities to lift ban on Facebook and news websites

VIENNA, 7 March 2012 – The OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media, Dunja Mijatović, appealed to the Government of Tajikistan today to reverse instructions to block the Facebook social media platform and four websites reporting on social and political affairs.

Internet service providers in Tajikistan say that on 2 March they received instructions by the Communications Service government agency to block access to Facebook and four news websites, [url=tjknews.com, maxala.org, centrasia.ru and zvezda.ru]tjknews.com, maxala.org, centrasia.ru and zvezda.ru[/url] (Polyarnaya Zvezda online portal).

“Despite occasional blocking of certain websites in Tajikistan, Internet has remained largely free,” Mijatović said. “This is the first time access to social media has been denied and I hope that this worrying development will not create a precedent.”

“As I pointed out in my letter to Foreign Minister Hamrokhon Zarifi on 5 March, Internet should remain an open public forum for discussion and free expression of opinions, as enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. In this letter I also expressed hope that access to Facebook and the four news websites would be restored without delay,” Mijatović said.

TAJIKISTAN: Facebook and four news websites blocked on government’s orders

Reporters Without Borders strongly condemns the sudden escalation in cyber-censorship by the Tajik government. Since 2 March, a dozen local Internet Service Providers have received orders to block access to the social network Facebook and four independent news websites.

“A year and a half after the last episode of this kind, the Tajik authorities have gone back to large-scale cyber-censorship,” Reporters Without Borders said. “This major blocking initiative is as inacceptable as it is absurd.”

For the most part, it has been impossible to access Facebook, the Russian geopolitical analysis site Polyarnaya Zvezda (Polar Star), the Tajik exile political news site Tjknews.com, the Uzbek news site Maxala.org and the Central Asian news site Centrasia.ru since the morning of 3 March.

State telecommunications chief Beg Zukhurov denied on 5 March that any orders had been given to ISPs and blamed “technical problems.” But the local press obtained a copy of a letter signed by Zukhurov’s deputy which was received by the main ISPs and which told them to “block access” to these five sites “in connection with preventive technical work (LINK).”

According to the information obtained by Reporters Without Borders, Poliarnaya Zvezda was the first site to be blocked, on the evening of 2 March. This tends to support the theory of several commentators that the cyber-censorship was prompted by an article on this site entitled “Tajikistan on the eve of a revolution” that was very critical of President Emomali Rakhmon’s government.

It is thought that the other sites were blocked when they, too, posted the offending article. Central Asia’s leading Russian-language news website, Fergananews, has meanwhile been surprised to learn that it has also been partially blocked in Tajikistan for several days.

The blocking of Facebook is especially absurd as it has only 35,000 users, far fewer than the Russian-language social networks Moy Mir and Vkontakte, which have 150,000 and 100,000 respectively.

The ruling People’s Democratic Party meanwhile announced yesterday that it plans to launch an alternative social network. The plan is reminiscent of the Uzbek government’s recent creation of Muloqot.uz, a national social network that is monitored and expurgated.

Generalized content filtering and attempts to move Internet users to “national” social networks are spreading alarmingly in Central Asia. So is the idea that the Internet should be carved up into national segments that are subject to locally-determined norms in the name of “security” and “local values.”

Tajikistan submitted a proposal for an “Internet code of good conduct” to the United Nations on 23 September. Supported by China, Russia, and Uzbekistan, it basically aims to subject the free flow of information to local standards and government imperatives.

Joint Statement of Tajik Media Organizations

Joint Statement of the Media Organizations of Tajikistan

Dushanbe, 9 March 2012

The Tajik Union of Journalists (UJT), the Tajik National Association of Independent Mass Media (NANSMIT), the Tajik Media Alliance (MAT), the Tajik Media Council and the Tajik Memorial Foundation of Journalists decisively condemn the actions of the Communication Service under the government of Tajikistan leading to limited access to the social network Facebook and other certain Internet resources covering the issues of public and political life.

Since last week, citizens of Tajikistan have had no access to Facebook and a number of other Internet resources, which is a violation of the constitutional right of access to information. Tajikistan’s Internet providers report that on 2 March they received an order from the government Communication Service to block access to Facebook and to the following four web sites: www.tjknews.com, www.maxala.org, www.centrasia.ru and www.zvezda.ru (the Internet portal of the Russian periodical Polyarnaya Zvezda). As an excuse for the blocked access, the communication authorities chose “prophylactic maintenance”, which does not sound very convincing.

Information and communication experts say that the blocking of social networks and web sites is seen as an inefficient and short-sighted action. The state communications agency used to perform similar actions. Such ungrounded and unjustified acts damage Tajikistan’s image; this is a direct threat to the national information security.

According to Tajikistan’s Information Security Concept, “…the striving of potential adversaries to infringe Tajikistan’s interests in the global information space along with attempts to push the country out of domestic and international markets, and aggravation of international rivalry in the area of ownership of information and communication technologies are the main sources of threat to the national information security”.

We are confident that nobody has authorized the Communication Service under the government to violate the right of citizens to information, and we demand to immediately lift the order blocking domestic access to Facebook and other web sites.

Akbarali Sattorov, UJT
Nuriddin Karshiboev, NANSMIT
Zinatullo Ismoilov, Tajik Media Council
Khurshed Niyozov, MAT
Mukhtor Bokizoda, Memorial Foundation of Journalists

http://nansmit.tj/news/?id=2433

Tajik Official Cites ‘Crime’ As Facebook, News Sites Still Blocked

DUSHANBE — Facebook and several independent news websites remain blocked in Tajikistan, and an official has suggested the cutoff may be linked to potential national security concerns.

Access by Tajiks to Facebook and the Russian-language sites centrasia.ru, tjk.news.com, zvezda.ru, and maxala.org has been cut off since March 3, apparently in response to an order from the state communications agency.

Tajikistan’s representative to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), said in a statement that Internet sites and media have to be «accountable» for their actions.

The statement, from envoy Nuriddin Shamsov, also said government has a duty to provide national security and «combat cybercrimes.»

Earlier this week, the OSCE called on Tajikistan to end the Internet blocks, calling the development «worrying.»

With Asia Plus reporting

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Источник: http://www.rferl.org/content/tajik_envoy_osce_cites_crime_facebook_news_sites_still_blocked/24510537

Social Network Aims To Attract World’s Muslims

An online social network for Muslims around the globe? That’s how Salamworld, a private firm with origins in former Soviet republics, promotes itself.

Salamworld says that when it goes online in August, it will be unlike Facebook or other social networks because it will be «halal» compliant — in accordance with Islamic principles.

Salamworld also plans to provide Islamic content to its users — including an online Islamic library, podcasts of sermons by Islamic scholars, and video games created «by Muslims for Muslims.»

With its first offices at Moscow’s Islamic Cultural Center and in Cairo, and with a new headquarters in Istanbul, Salamworld says it wants to attract 30 million Muslim users within three years.

But some Muslims express concerns about Salamworld’s apparent links to Moscow and governments of other former Soviet republics. They also want to know who provided the firm’s $50 million in start-up capital — still undisclosed despite company pledges to eventually release the names of what it says are «private businessmen in Kazakhstan.»

Afghans have an inherent distrust for any Moscow-linked project purporting to be Islamic, says Noori Wali, who heads Afghan German Online, a website for expatriate Afghans around the world.

«As a Muslim and as an Afghan, I think it is a plot that by no means would benefit Islam,» Wali says. «On the contrary, it would damage Islam. Using the ways they have known over the years, they want to spoil Islam and damage its reputation.»

Azerbaijan’s «donkey blogger,» Adnan Hajizada, who was imprisoned for a year on hooliganism charges after satirizing Azerbaijan’s government in 2009, says he has heard fears expressed about who is behind Salamworld.

«I still think it is a business project, but I also heard from some Muslims on Facebook that they are not going to join the Salamworld network because they fear this is a network created by some forces that want to identify active Muslims in different parts of the world and, later, do surveillance on them, or persecute them, or things of that sort,» Hajizada says. «However, I do not possess any proof [of that.]»

Kremlin Connections

The identities of Salamworld’s executives is the source of much of the concern. The company’s director-general is Abdul-Vahed Niyazov, who also heads the Moscow-based Islamic Cultural Center, a public division of Russia’s official Council of Muftis, a Kremlin-linked body.

An ethnic Tatar, Niyazov has a long history of ties to the Russian authorities and was elected to the State Duma in 1999 as a member of the Unity bloc, which later became Prime Minister and President-elect Vladimir Putin’s ruling United Russia party.

He has spent the past year trying to build support among Muslim leaders around the world. Traveling across North Africa, the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and Europe. Niyazov has won support from authorities like Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Said Aqil Siraj, the leader of Indonesia’s largest Muslim organization, Nahdlatul Ulama.

Niyazov declined to speak to RFE/RL, referring questions about Salamworld’s «no politics» policy to his spokesman, Yavuz Selim Kurt, who insists the firm is apolitical and has no government ties or agenda.

«We say no politics. This means no politics for us. We are not in favor of any party. We are neutral. Everyone may express themselves freely, but Salamworld is not [getting involved] in any political discussion,» Kurt says.

«We are just providing a service for users. They may have political ideas. They may express themselves freely,» he adds. «However, we will have some criteria. There will not be any [promotion of] violence. There will not be any terrorist statements or expressions, and there will not be anything against humanity and human rights.»

Pushing ‘Official Islam’?

Salamworld’s vice president, Akhmed Azimov moved from his native city of Makhachkala, capital of Russia’s republic of Daghestan, in 1998 to study at St. Petersburg State University. He moved to Moscow after completing his studies in St. Petersburg, and now serves as the vice president of the Council on Nationalities Affairs under Moscow’s municipal government. He also coordinates the Expert Board of the Russian Council of Muftis.

Elcin Asgarov, an Azerbaijani citizen who is a Salamworld board member, also has government ties. Until last year he served as deputy chairman of Baku’s State Committee for Work with Religious Organizations, the body that supervises religion in Azerbaijan.

In that government post, Asgarov worked against the politicization of Islam, using the parliament’s official newspaper to accuse the Islamic Party of Azerbaijan and its leadership of «sabotage against our nation and statehood» after they had criticized President Ilham Aliyev and had protested a ban on head scarves in schools.

Working for Salamworld, Asgarov traveled to Iran last year to discuss cooperation with the offices of the Grand Ayatollah Naser Makarem Shirazi, and with Iran’s ministries of Communication, Youth, and Sports. Kurt says the firm now plans to open a Tehran office.

Salamworld’s leadership also includes other prominent Muslims and businessmen from Russia, Azerbaijan, Daghestan, and former Soviet republics in Central Asia.

The chief editor of the website’s Islamic content is Elmir Guliyev, author of a Russian interpretation of the Koran. Russia’s Council of Muftis has also signed a memorandum of understanding with Salamworld.

…Or Infiltration?

There’s a rich history of government infiltration into technology companies, notes Simon Davies, a fellow at the London School of Economics and director of Privacy International, either by starting companies that achieve market status or by gaining a controlling interest, because of national security interests.

The Kremlin associations of the Salamworld leadership raises suspicion, Davies says. «I was a bit skeptical at first and my instinct was this is just a front for a financial investor who is tapping the political motivation. But it sounds like it could be more than that. They seem to be playing a two-handed game here. This is intriguing. Definitely a political stitch-up. There is definitely an intent here to infiltrate.»

But Kurt, the Salamworld spokesman, insists the project is nothing more than a commercial venture seeking profit for its unnamed investors by tapping into a growing global market for Islamic products.

With additional reporting by RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani and Tatar-Bashkir services and Radio Free Afghanistan

Ron Synovitz, Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Источник: http://www.rferl.org/content/salamworld_social_network_aims_to_attract_worlds_muslims/24510469.html

Facebook and four news websites blocked on government’s orders

Press release / Communiqué de presse

Reporters Without Borders strongly condemns the sudden escalation in cyber-censorship by the Tajik government. Since 2 March, a dozen local Internet Service Providers have received orders to block access to the social network Facebook and four independent news websites.

“A year and a half after the last episode of this kind, the Tajik authorities have gone back to large-scale cyber-censorship,” Reporters Without Borders said. “This major blocking initiative is as inacceptable as it is absurd.”

For the most part, it has been impossible to access Facebook, the Russian geopolitical analysis site Polyarnaya Zvezda (Polar Star), the Tajik exile political news site Tjknews.com, the Uzbek news site Maxala.org and the Central Asian news site Centrasia.ru since the morning of 3 March.

State telecommunications chief Beg Zukhurov denied on 5 March that any orders had been given to ISPs and blamed “technical problems.” But the local press obtained a copy of a letter signed by Zukhurov’s deputy which was received by the main ISPs and which told them to “block access” to these five sites “in connection with preventive technical work (LINK).”

According to the information obtained by Reporters Without Borders, Poliarnaya Zvezda was the first site to be blocked, on the evening of 2 March. This tends to support the theory of several commentators that the cyber-censorship was prompted by an article on this site entitled “Tajikistan on the eve of a revolution” that was very critical of President Emomali Rakhmon’s government.

It is thought that the other sites were blocked when they, too, posted the offending article. Central Asia’s leading Russian-language news website, Fergananews, has meanwhile been surprised to learn that it has also been partially blocked in Tajikistan for several days.

The blocking of Facebook is especially absurd as it has only 35,000 users, far fewer than the Russian-language social networks Moy Mir and Vkontakte, which have 150,000 and 100,000 respectively.

The ruling People’s Democratic Party meanwhile announced yesterday that it plans to launch an alternative social network. The plan is reminiscent of the Uzbek government’s recent creation of Muloqot.uz, a national social network that is monitored and expurgated.

Generalized content filtering and attempts to move Internet users to “national” social networks are spreading alarmingly in Central Asia. So is the idea that the Internet should be carved up into national segments that are subject to locally-determined norms in the name of “security” and “local values.”

Tajikistan submitted a proposal for an “Internet code of good conduct” to the United Nations on 23 September. Supported by China, Russia, and Uzbekistan, it basically aims to subject the free flow of information to local standards and government imperatives.

http://en.rsf.org/tajikistan-facebook-and-four-news-websites-08-03-2012,42043.html

Tajikistan orders Internet providers to block websites

New York, March 7, 2012—Authorities in Tajikistan must immediately lift the order blocking domestic access to several news websites and Facebook, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.

On Friday, the Tajik state communications agency ordered local Internet providers to block access to Facebook and the independent news websites Zvezda, Maxala, CentrAsia, and TjkNews, according to news reports. The agency cited scheduled technical maintenance although it did not explain why it would need to shut down these particular websites, the independent regional news website Ferghana News reported.

Reuters reported that the authorities issued the order the day after Zvezda published a political commentary, headlined «Tajikistan on the eve of revolution,» which TjkNews and CentrAsia republished shortly after. It is unclear if Maxala was targeted for similar reasons. The article covered a recent meeting in which Tajikistan President Emomali Rahmon allegedly ordered security services to increase surveillance of local religious groups and members of the Islamic Party of Tajikistan, news reports said. The article also criticized Rahmon for growing authoritarianism, inattention to government corruption, and increasing poverty, CPJ’s review of the articles found.

Minutes of Rahmon’s meeting were also posted on Facebook, which spurred several public comments, before access to the social networking site was blocked, Radio Ozodi, the Tajik service of the U.S. government-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, reported.

«We call on officials to immediately restore access to Facebook and to news websites Zvezda, Maxala, CentrAsia, and TjkNews,» CPJ Europe and Central Asia Program Coordinator Nina Ognianova said. «Rahmon’s administration should tolerate the criticism and scrutiny that come with holding public office, and stop censoring critical media.»

One local Internet provider told independent news website Asia-Plus that when it resisted the order, state Internet and communications company Tajiktelekom cut its service. The provider, which asked Asia-Plus not to reveal its name, eventually blocked access to the websites in exchange for restored service.

In a statement published Tuesday, Tajikistan’s Internet Providers’ Association condemned the censorship order and urged authorities to drop it, Radio Ozodi reported.

http://www.cpj.org/2012/03/tajikistan-orders-internet-providers-to-block-webs.php

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