Towards The Total Surveillance State: Ethiopia
from
the they-know-everything-we-do dept
One of the
most disturbing aspects of Edward Snowden’s leaks is that they reveal the total
surveillance state, where the authorities monitor everything, and know
everything, is no mere abstraction. Where before such a vision was the domain
of tinfoil-wearing, conspiracy theorists, today it is only a couple of “hops” from reality. Given
that the enabling technology is available, you might have expected there would
already be a few nations that have moved close to the total surveillance state;
but you might be surprised to learn that one of them is Ethiopia. A new and chilling report published
recently by Human Rights Watch, entitled “They Know Everything We
Do: Telecom and Internet Surveillance in Ethiopia,” explores the evidence in
detail (pdf):
The Ethiopian government has maintained strict control over
Internet and mobile technologies so it can monitor their use and limit the type
of information that is being communicated and accessed. Unlike most other
African countries, Ethiopia has a complete monopoly over its rapidly growing
telecommunications sector through the state-owned operator, Ethio Telecom. This
monopoly ensures that Ethiopia can effectively limit access to information and
curtail freedoms of expression and association without any oversight since
independent legislative or judicial mechanisms that would ensure that
surveillance capabilities are not misused do not exist in Ethiopia.
Here’s what that means in practice:
Websites of opposition parties, independent media sites, blogs,
and several international media outlets are routinely blocked by government
censors. Radio and television stations are routinely jammed. Bloggers and
Facebook users face harassment and the threat of arrest should they refuse to
tone down their online writings. The message is simple: self-censor to limit
criticism of the government or you will be censored and subject to arrest.
Self-censorship is a real threat in countries with widespread
surveillance — even in those not as far down the path as Ethiopia. Indeed,
self-censorship is probably one of the first negative consequences of any
increasingly-pervasive surveillance regime.
Information gleaned from telecom and Internet sources is
regularly used against Ethiopians arrested for alleged anti-government
activities. During interrogations, police show suspects lists of phone calls
and are questioned about the identity of callers, particularly foreign callers.
That shows concretely how “mere” metadata can be used against
people, and why gathering it is so worrying. But the Ethiopian government does
not limit itself to gathering information from existing sources:
Some high-profile Ethiopians in the diaspora have been targeted
with highly advanced surveillance tools designed to covertly monitor online
activity and steal passwords and files.
It does this
thanks to technology acquired from the West — the report mentionsGamma/FinFisher and
Hacking Team, both European companies. Human Rights Watch concludes its summary
as follows:
Ethiopia should not only ensure that an appropriate legal
framework is in place to protect and respect privacy rights entrenched in
international law, but also that this legal framework is applied in practice.
Companies that provide surveillance technology, software, or services should
adopt policies to ensure these products are being used for legitimate law
enforcement purposes and not to repress opposition parties, journalists,
bloggers, and others.
Sadly,
neither of those seems very likely to happen, as total surveillance continues
to spread around the world, passing from a vague dystopian fear into a mundane
fact of life.Follow me @glynmoody on Twitter or identi.ca, and
+glynmoody on Google+
http://ethioforum.org
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