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Indian Internet Lawsuit
Puts Spotlight on Freedom of Expression
Anjana Pasricha
January 20, 2012
In
India, Internet giants such as Google and Facebook are fighting a
lawsuit after the government authorized their prosecution for online
content on their sites deemed to be offensive. The case has put the
spotlight on free speech in the world’s largest democracy.
The criminal lawsuit filed by the editor of New Delhi-based Urdu weekly
Akbari accuses 21 Internet companies of violating Indian law. Vinay Rai
alleged that online material on their websites has the potential to
incite religious conflict.
Rai said his colleagues brought to his attention images of Prophet
Muhammad which could offend Muslims. He cited other images and text
which could hurt sentiments of Hindus and Christians. Rai wants Internet
companies to screen content before it is posted.
Google and Facebook have asked the Delhi High Court to dismiss the case
against them. In an appeal, they said it is impossible to filter all
content or stop individuals from posting material online.
Editor Rai filed the case after the government indicated its approval
for the prosecution. The official go-ahead came weeks after the
government also raised a similar demand.
Voluntary framework
Telecommunications Minister Kapil Sibal told Internet company
representatives to come up with a voluntary framework to keep offensive
material off the net. After confronting them with photos and material
derogatory of Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress Party
leader Sonia Gandhi, he said the companies had not cooperated.
Both the court case and the government’s demands have stoked fears of
net censorship in the world’s largest democracy.
Advocacy groups say the dispute between authorities and websites began
simmering last year when India tightened laws to block content which
could be deemed offensive. Citizens and officials can ask sites to block
objectionable material and failure to comply within 36 hours can attract
penalties or imprisonment of up to seven years.
Sunil Abraham, with the Center for Internet and Society in India, said
these rules have the potential to curtail debate and discussion on the
net.
“These limits are vague. They allow for all sorts of subjective tests by
private parties and we predicted they would have a chilling effect on
freedom of expression online," Abraham said. "Policy in India has been
headed in a very worrisome direction.”
Abraham pointed out that one of his organization’s recent studies
indicates that, faced with the threat of stiff penalties, most service
providers removed content when asked to do so, even when it was not
offensive or controversial.
Free media?
The government insists its objective is not to encroach on the
fundamental right of free speech guaranteed by India’s democratic
constitution. The clarification came from Minister Kapil Sibal after his
meetings with Internet companies last month.
“This government does not believe in censorship," noted Sibal. "This
government does not believe in either directly or indirectly interfering
in the freedom of the press, and we have demonstrated that time and
again.”
India does have a vibrant free media and Internet access is largely
free, unlike in China. But in a country with a history of religious
violence, authorities have long tussled with the dilemma of balancing
free speech with the need to not inflame sentiments among religious
groups. India was one of the first countries to ban Salman Rushdie’s
“The Satanic Verses.”
Other books and articles have also faced bans. Many are challenged in
courts and several have been overturned.
Now the focus is on the Internet and questions are being raised about
whether the web should or can be policed.
Online freedom
In
a remark widely quoted in the domestic media, a judge hearing the case
had warned websites that like China, India might be compelled to block
some of them if they did not create means to curb material seen as
offensive.
However, Abraham from the Center of Internet and Society hopes that, as
the latest case navigates its way through Indian courts, online freedom
will come up the winner.
“I think the executive in India has always been very conservative in
freedom of expression. It is usually the courts in India that protect
freedom of expression, the precedent," Abraham said. "So we are every
hopeful that the current case is in the appropriate venue, and we are
confident that, as in the past, the judiciary in India will stand on the
side of freedom of expression.”
With 100 million people surfing the web, India has the world’s third
largest number of Internet users after China and the United States. |