- The Zimbabwean government has proposed obliging its internet
service providers to divulge details of e-mails deemed offensive or dangerous.
Zispa, the local ISP association, has asked the government to clarify its
proposed addendum to providers' franchise contracts.
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- One ISP told BBC News Online it was not a provider's
duty to police the net.
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- President Robert Mugabe has suggested the internet, widely
developed in Zimbabwe, is a tool of colonialists.
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- Our business is internet provision, not internet policing
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- Zimbabwean ISP spokesperson
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- The BBC's source, who spoke on condition of anonymity,
pointed out that the move would be impracticable, given the volume of traffic
involved.
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- Part of the ISPs' concern is the apparent vagueness of
the wording in the addendum, a copy of which the BBC has obtained.
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- They would be required, in the event of an investigation,
to pass to government officials user details relating to material featuring
anything from obscenity to "anti-national activities".
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- It is already illegal in Zimbabwe to "undermine
the authority of the president" or to "engender hostility"
towards him as well as to make abusive, obscene or false statements against
him.
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- Poorly conceived
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- The ISPs point out that, while they would always be happy
to assist any investigation into crimes such as terrorism, it is not their
job to monitor e-traffic.
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- The government's media control stops at the keyboard
for now
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- "Our business is internet provision, not internet
policing," said the BBC's source, drawing an analogy with car manufacturers.
It would, the spokesperson said, be like making car firms responsible for
the behaviour of drivers.
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- The proposed contract addendum, quietly distributed in
mid-May, also refers to the contravention of non-existent "international
cyber laws".
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- ISPs do not keep records of the emails they handle and
would require a huge storage capacity to do so.
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- "I just don't think that this was carefully thought
out before they sent it out to the ISPs and I don't believe that it will
be practically possible," the ISP spokesperson told the BBC.
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- Precious forum
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- The internet is one of the few media left through which
opposition groups can spread their message as the government controls the
radio and television stations and newspapers are under pressure.
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- Only last November, 14 people were arrested for circulating
an e-mail calling for protests to oust Mr Mugabe.
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- Along with South Africa, Zimbabwe is one of the African
continent's most internet-friendly countries.
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- In 2002, it had 100,000 registered users.
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- President Mugabe last year described the internet as
a tool used by "a few countries... in quest of global dominance and
hegemony".
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