In the context of ever-increasing online control, ARTICLE 19 is working to protect and extend people’s digital freedoms worldwide. Globally, ARTICLE 19 is one of very few civil society organisations with a seat at the UN International Telecommunications Union’s table, where we push for human rights to be at the heart of all their decisions – from assigning satellite orbits to improving infrastructure in the Global South. Our advocacy there has resulted in positive action on community networks: small, nonprofit operators that are vital to getting rural and remote communities online. In Central Asia, ARTICLE 19 is advocating for robust protection of free expression online. Our research exposes how governments in the region routinely block independent media outlets and other online resources, as well as using vague legal provisions to bring legal action against journalists and to jail individuals for as little as a social media post. We also support the brave activists resisting repression on the ground in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan. And in Iran, where internet shutdowns – especially during protests – provide cover for the authorities to murder and maim with impunity, ARTICLE 19 works with our networks on the ground to develop tech that enables people to evade censorship and get online. In 2023, we provided emergency support to 1,200 people, including protesters, ethnic religious minorities, and LGBTQI+ people. Like the woman who lost 4 family members on flight PS752, which Iran’s Revolutionary Guard shot down on 8 January 2020, killing all 176 on board. She was one of dozens arrested at the funeral of 17-year-old schoolgirl Armita Garawand, who died after being assaulted by Iran’s ‘morality police’ for wearing ‘improper hijab’. We secured her social accounts – including group messages between the families of flight PS752 victims – when she was being transported to a detainment centre, so that the authorities could not access them. As a result, she was released 3 days later, and the families’ privacy was protected. |