skip to main |
skip to sidebar
11:57:00 AM
valgeo
Is Internet access and online freedom of expression a basic human
right? The United Nations’ Human Rights Council unanimously backed that
notion in a resolution passed Thursday.
The resolution says that all people should be allowed to connect to
and express themselves freely on the Internet. All 47 members of the
Human Rights Council, including notoriously censorship-prone countries
such as China and Cuba, signed the resolution.
China’s support for the resolution came with the stipulation that the
“free flow of information on the Internet and the safe flow of
information on the Internet are mutually dependent,” as Chinese delegate
Xia Jingge told the Council in a sign that the country isn’t about to
tear down the so-called “Great Firewall of China.”
The concept was first affirmed by a U.N. agency, the International
Telecommunications Union (ITU), in 2003. The ITU has recently come under
fire after rumors arose
that member states were preparing proposals to give the United Nations
more control over the Internet ahead of a December conference. The ITU
has rejected many of those claims.
Internet access as a human right has since been supported by several
of the Internet’s most well-known proponents, including Tim Berners-Lee,
the inventor of the World Wide Web.
“[It's] an empowering thing for humanity to be connected at high speed and without borders,” Berners-Lee told the BBC in April of last year while reflecting on the Internet’s role in the Arab Spring uprisings.
The Human Rights Council is a United Nations body that monitors human
rights progress and violations across all member countries. It has previously called
the right to freedom and expression “one of the essential foundations
of a democratic society” and has recognized the Internet’s importance in
the “promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and
expression.”
A separate United Nations report called Internet access a human right in June of last year.
0 σχόλια:
Post a Comment