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How can societies combat the stream of false, often fabricated information that surges across the
internet and through social media, polluting political debates almost everywhere? That question has
bedeviled defenders of democracy at least since the 2016 U.S. presidential election. And at a New
Year’s news conference outside the Elysee Palace this month, French President Emmanuel Macron
offered his own answer.
Macron’s goal, it seems, is to curtail “fake news” by law. He is promising that, by the end of the
year, he will introduce a bill to crack down on those spreading misinformation during any election
period.
But France already has a repressive law banning the publication or broadcasting of disinformation in
bad faith.
Under Article 27 of the famous Press Law of 1881, disseminating false information “by whatever
means” is punishable by a fine of up to 45,000 euros ($55,000) in today’s currency.
The Press Law, however, applies only to information that has “disturbed the public peace,” which
can be very difficult to define, let alone prove. Another law, part of the electoral code, provides for
punishment of one year in prison and a fine of 15,000 euros for anyone who uses false information
“or other fraudulent maneuvers” to steal votes. But this provision applies primarily to cases of
electoral fraud.
Although he didn’t explicitly say so in his recent speech, he is clearly targeting the kind of Russian
interference that played a prominent role in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, and also threatened
his own presidential campaign last spring.
But Macron is also looking beyond Russia. His larger goal is to protect democratic institutions
against any regime advocating what he calls “political illiberalism,” such as the governments led by
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, or Poland’s Law
and Justice party.
The first track Macron is exploring concerns transparency. Digital platforms will likely be subjected
to higher transparency standards for all “sponsored content,” not just to disclose the identity of
advertisers, but also to limit the amounts spent on these messages. Second, Macron will try to
establish summary proceedings in which judges can order that content be deleted, or that websites be
delisted from search engines or blocked altogether.
France is not the first country to legislate against fake news. On the eve of the German federal
election last September, Germany’s Parliament passed a law known as “NetzDG,” which came into
force on Jan. 1, 2018. The law requires social networks such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube to
remove all illegal content posted by users, which includes hate speech, in addition to disinformation,
within 24 hours, or face a fine of up to 50 million euros ($61.3 million). Italy’s government, ahead of
a general election in March, has also proposed a bill to police fake news.
Not surprisingly, Macron’s proposed legislation has provoked criticism, not just from Marine Le
Pen’s far-right National Front, but also from the extreme left. Macron’s critics have enlisted the help
of legal experts who argue that the laws already on the books are sufficient to contain fake news.
Yet these experts have failed to grasp the extent to which new technologies, like social media, enable
wrongdoing. Those seeking to spread misinformation and conspiracy theories now have more
opportunities than ever to do so. If anything, the need for new measures ensuring transparent and
accurate online content should be obvious.
Still, the new judicial procedure that Macron envisions will need to be examined carefully once it has
been fleshed out. Should a judge have the power to decide on the spot what is true and what is false,
and then issue fines? After all, “fake news” can take many forms, and sometimes it is disseminated
without any malign intention to manipulate voters or sway an election.
A second complication is the controversial issue of net neutrality. Presumably, the law will have to
police disinformation while also ensuring that internet service providers treat all online content
equally.
Moreover, it remains to be seen how Macron will address social networks and online actors that are
based abroad, and over whom French authorities have no jurisdiction.
No reasonable person suspects Macron of wanting to introduce censorship. But his proposed law will
need to include safeguards. For now, it is promising to learn that the proposed law would pertain only
to the period preceding elections – a delicate moment in the public life of a democracy.
In any case, Macron’s proposed legislation will be but one tool in the fight against disinformation.
Public education to improve media literacy and new classifications to treat social-media platforms as
publishers with editorial accountability, can also undermine disinformation campaigns.
Ultimately, stanching the flow of fake news is a global challenge that will require a global solution.
In this regard, the European Commission’s decision to convene a group of experts to lead a public
consultation on the issue is to be welcomed. One hopes that the process results in a set of
recommendations on the best way forward.
But, until then, Macron’s controversial proposals – which, to be sure, some 79 percent of French
people favor, according to a recent poll – will at least prompt citizens to start thinking in stark terms
about an issue that touches the very foundation of Western democracy. As we have seen in one
country after another, a disinformed voter is a democrat’s nemesis.
Raphael Hadas-Lebel, an honorary member of the Conseil d’Etat, is a former professor at Sciences
Po. THE DAILY STAR publishes this commentary in collaboration with Project Syndicate
80
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The Independent Online
All it might take is the wrong Hezbollah official or unit stationed on the border to receive, and
believe, a fake news message for all hell to break loose AFP/Getty
Conspiracy theories are not a new phenomenon in the Middle East. Many
governments and influential organisations in the region – if not all of them –
have long thrived on the power of disinformation and propaganda, which not
only confuses enemies but keeps citizens in a state of pliant uncertainty.
The wide horizons of the internet make it easier than ever before to mask
ulterior motives. That Russian stories spread by legions of Twitter bots and
trolls managed to so spectacularly derail the 2016 US election has conclusively
proved that we are living in a post-truth era.
The impact the new fake news ecosystem could have when the Middle East’s
appetite for half-truths meets increasingly sophisticated methods of spreading
political disinformation, however, are not yet known – and could have
devastating consequences.
0:00
0:56
“The potential explosive power of fake news sites is even more important in
societies that are unstable or weak or divided along sectarian lines in the first
place,” he said.
“When fake news targets that aspect of identity it has a very strong mobilising
power,” he added.
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
In Lebanon, many are already on edge give the precarious situation in Syria and
media drum-beating for another round of war between Hezbollah and Israel.
It is common for Lebanese to share news updates and other messages via
WhatsApp and SMS, copying and pasting the text to others in their contact lists.
Given the context, however, one fake news story which circulated recently
raised more than a few eyebrows.
“Urgent”, read the message, which purported to be from Reuters news agency.
“Hezbollah kidnaps top-ranking Mossad intelligence officers in Israel’s elite
class.”
The Arabic text went on to quote an unnamed Israeli intelligence officer who
said that Israel had decided to attack Hezbollah in Lebanon as a result of the
Mossad kidnappings.
23 show all
“We will not be responsible for the results because of the Lebanese people’s
embrace of the Hezbollah terrorist,” the falsified quote read.
While the language of the supposed news alert – not wholly written in a dry
news tone, and missing several elements of a typical news story – was an
obvious fake to anyone with media literacy, the content is worrying.
It’s not clear how many people received it, whether there’s an identifying strand
between the recipients of occupation, class, geography – and perhaps most
alarmingly, where it came from.
It could be the work of a prankster who got hold of a subscription list, or bigger
actors, with more ambitious motives, could be involved. Without knowing the
intended audience, it is impossible to identify the sender.
The Israeli intelligence services are far too sophisticated to ever fall for a fake
news story such as the Mossad kidnap text, said Ben Nimmo, an information
defence Fellow with the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab.
0:32
In the Dombas, threatening SMS messages are periodically sent to the phones of
Ukrainian Armed Forces soldiers, in the hopes they will be intimated into
deserting their positions. While the source is without a shadow of a doubt
Russia, the texts originate from traceless cell site simulators, which impersonate
local mobile telephone signal masts.
There is no incentive for a new Hezbollah-Israel war on either side – both the
Lebanese militant group and the Jewish state are deeply preoccupied with the
war in bordering Syria – but all it might take is the wrong official or unit
stationed on the border to receive, and believe, a similar message for all hell to
break loose.
After all, it’s anchored in a realistic – and therefore believable – context: the
necessary conditions for the 2006 war were fanned by a number of unsuccessful
Hezbollah attempts to kidnap Israeli soldiers in 2005.
“The most powerful [fake news reports] are those that rely on something
existing and then diverge from the truth,” Dr Rickli said.
“It is the same mechanism as lies – the most powerful ones are those that are
building on something real.”
There are several conflicts in the Middle East which already run hot. But what
we may be seeing, given recent events, is the emergence of fake news tactics
which are not just aimed at sowing confusion and distrust among populations,
but influencing events on a state level.
The current diplomatic crisis in the Gulf is a case in point: the three-month-old
standoff sprung, in part, from the publication of a false news story planted by
hackers on a Qatari news agency.
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Qatar hack: Middle East is the worst place in the world for fake news
At the time, Qatar said that how quickly its neighbours picked up on the fake
comments about Iran and Israel from Emir Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani – and
the fact several regional outlets kept running the false remarks even after Qatar
had issued a statement explaining the hack – showed that something was amiss.
Recently divulged US intelligence appears to back up Qatar’s allegation the
story was planted by its regional rivals: officials believe that senior members of
the UAE’s government discussed the planned hacks on 23 May, the day before
they occurred, and either carried out the cyber attack themselves or used a third
party.
An earlier FBI investigation found that the hack was the work of Russian
hackers – whether they were from the government, or freelancers hired by a
third party, is unknown.
The Gulf dispute is ongoing, and its huge geopolitical implications are yet to be
fully understood.
If the US intel is correct, this is an instance of fake news being used to directly
influence events in the Middle East.
“These Cold War-style tactics utilising the ‘force of politics’ rather than the
‘politics of force’ could be used to great effect in the region.”
he Rise Of Fake News In The Middle East &
Beyond
By Daniella P. Cohen | The Media Line
January 4, 2018
There is a growing need for media organs to report the facts as they are, and not as people want
them to be
The term “fake news” became further retrenched in the world’s collective consciousness this past
year, intriguing the public yet posing a threat to the credibility of journalism. Ever since fighting
fake news became a rallying call during the 2016 U.S. election campaign, it is difficult to gauge
whether its incidence has, in fact, become more pervasive or whether undue attention has been
focused on the sensationalist phenomenon.
In the Middle East, many contend that fake news is increasingly being used as an instrument for
advancing political interests, with the ongoing crisis involving the Gulf Cooperation Council being
a prominent example. On April 19, a Russian hacker—his origin determined by the FBI—
infiltrated the state-run Qatar News Agency (QNA) website and falsely published that Doha’s
Emir, Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, had criticized U.S. President Donald Trump while praising
Shiite Iran along with Hamas and its parent organization the Muslim Brotherhood.
While the story was widely read—and played into the decision by Sunni Saudi Arabia, Bahrain
and the United Arab Emirates to boycott Qatar—doubts regarding its validity quickly arose,
leading, eventually, to the hack being exposed. However, this did not stop additional false
allegations about Qatar from being published throughout the region. For example, on August 21
Dubai TV broadcast a piece, which proved to be untrue, claiming anti-government rallies were
taking place in Doha and that troops had used tear gas against demonstrators.
Israel, too, featured prominently in another Russian hack, this one targeting Lebanon, where a
purported advisory by the Reuters news agency was circulated over SMS and WhatsApp: “Urgent!
Hizbullah kidnaps top-ranking Mossad intelligence officers in Israel’s elite class,” the fictitious
message read. It further claimed, incorrectly, that an unnamed Mossad official had responded by
attacking Hizbullah in Lebanon. The fake news was propagated at a time of heightened tensions
between Israel and the terror organization and thus ran the risk of further enflaming the situation.
In another instance, Reuters was indeed guilty of spreading a false news story. On April 3, the wire
service published a piece titled, “Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner visits Iraq, US official says.”
Reuters later tweeted that the information was “wrong and [is] withdrawn.”
The political dimensions of the phenomenon were further demonstrated in November, when
President Trump slammed as fake news a CNN report on a slave market in Libya. A local Libyan
channel picked up on the criticism and further questioned the motives behind the expose. CNN,
however, held firm and did not retract the story. This is but one example of the potential for
individuals in positions of power to cry “fake news” to serve their own interests, irrespective of
whether a particular item is true or not.
Fake news likewise has demonstrated the ability to manipulate how the public perceives a given
issue or conflict. On June 2, for example, an organization called UN Watch demanded that the
chief of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), which attends to Palestinian
refugees, apologize for including images of a besieged Syrian girl in a fundraising campaign for
the Gaza Strip. Similarly, the Al Araby news site used a picture taken in 2015 to document this
November’s attack on the Al-Rawda mosque in the Sinai Peninsula, which killed more than 300
people.
Speaking to The Media Line, Anthony Bellanger, General Secretary of the International Federation
of Journalists, explained that fake news has long been used as a propaganda tool. “Some authorities
have always needed to modify information that they disliked, but now social networks seem to be
amplifying this trend.” While he attributes multiple causes to the emergence of fake news,
Bellanger stressed that a “lack of time, degraded working conditions and understaffing have also
contributed to the decline in the quality of information.” Nevertheless, he insisted, “fake news
cannot be tolerated” and described as a “fundamental duty” the need for journalists to weed out
false information.
Yet work-related pressures, including tight deadlines, sometimes make it difficult for journalists
to maintain high standards. Professor Moshe Negbi, a media ethics expert at The Hebrew
University of Jerusalem, contended to The Media Line that, “today if a journalist misses a scoop
or headline he may be fired, but if he publishes a fake headline he might be promoted.” Negbi
believes that the abundance of fake news is a byproduct of the “deterioration of journalism ethics
[caused] by the media’s commercial orientation, in which they care much less about the
authenticity and truth of the news and more about attracting an audience and ratings.”
For this reason, Prof. Kathleen Culver, Director of the Center for Journalism Ethics at the
University of Wisconsin-Madison, called on “legitimate news organizations to step up their game.
Because of information pollution,” she expounded, “[there is a] need to be more engaged with the
public on why people make the choices they make and how their news is produced.” Culver told
The Media Line that “there’s no question that fake news was profitable in 2017 with the numerous
hoaxes and conspiracy theories,” while postulating that many may be fooled by, or even attracted
to, fake news because they “want narratives that reinforce their views [while brandishing] the
‘other side’ as the root of problems.”
Many analysts argue that the rise of fake news may further erode public trust in the mainstream
media, a reality that could eventually prompt a reckoning within the industry; that is, a
reawakening to the imperative of reporting the facts as they are, and not as people would like them
to be.
Conspiracy theories are not a new phenomenon in the Middle East. Many governments
and influential organisations in the region – if not all of them – have long thrived on the
power of disinformation and propaganda, which not only confuses enemies but keeps
citizens in a state of pliant uncertainty.
The wide horizons of the internet make it easier than ever before to mask ulterior motives.
That Russian stories spread by legions of Twitter bots and trolls managed to so
spectacularly derail the 2016 US election has conclusively proved that we are living in a
post-truth era.
The impact the new fake news ecosystem could have when the Middle East’s appetite
for half-truths meets increasingly sophisticated methods of spreading political
disinformation, however, are not yet known – and could have devastating consequences.
The possibility for fresh disruption in the increasingly polarised region is immense, said
Dr Jean Marc Rikli, a research fellow at King’s College London and the Geneva Centre
for Security Policy.
“The potential explosive power of fake news sites is even more important in societies that
are unstable or weak or divided along sectarian lines in the first place,” he said.
“When fake news targets that aspect of identity it has a very strong mobilising power,” he
added.
In Lebanon, many are already on edge give the precarious situation in Syria and media
drum-beating for another round of war between Hezbollah and Israel.
It is common for Lebanese to share news updates and other messages via WhatsApp
and SMS, copying and pasting the text to others in their contact lists. Given the context,
however, one fake news story which circulated recently raised more than a few eyebrows.
“Urgent”, read the message, which purported to be from Reuters news agency.
“Hezbollah kidnaps top-ranking Mossad intelligence officers in Israel’s elite class.”
The Arabic text went on to quote an unnamed Israeli intelligence officer who said that
Israel had decided to attack Hezbollah in Lebanon as a result of the Mossad kidnappings.
“We will not be responsible for the results because of the Lebanese people’s embrace of
the Hezbollah terrorist,” the falsified quote read.
While the language of the supposed news alert – not wholly written in a dry news tone,
and missing several elements of a typical news story – was an obvious fake to anyone
with media literacy, the content is worrying.
It’s not clear how many people received it, whether there’s an identifying strand between
the recipients of occupation, class, geography – and perhaps most alarmingly, where it
came from.
It could be the work of a prankster who got hold of a subscription list, or bigger actors,
with more ambitious motives, could be involved. Without knowing the intended audience,
it is impossible to identify the sender.
The Israeli intelligence services are far too sophisticated to ever fall for a fake news story
such as the Mossad kidnap text, said Ben Nimmo, an information defence Fellow with the
Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab.
But Hezbollah’s secretive intel agency is unlikely to be as well resourced or staffed – and
the text has similarities with “pinpoint propaganda”, which Mr Nimmo’s research has found
in Ukraine to be information warfare akin to a “high-tech version of dropping leaflets onto
enemy battlefields”.
In the Dombas, threatening SMS messages are periodically sent to the phones of
Ukrainian Armed Forces soldiers, in the hopes they will be intimated into deserting their
positions. While the source is without a shadow of a doubt Russia, the texts originate from
traceless cell site simulators, which impersonate local mobile telephone signal masts.
There is no incentive for a new Hezbollah-Israel war on either side – both the Lebanese
militant group and the Jewish state are deeply preoccupied with the war in bordering Syria
– but all it might take is the wrong official or unit stationed on the border to receive, and
believe, a similar message for all hell to break loose.
After all, it’s anchored in a realistic – and therefore believable – context: the necessary
conditions for the 2006 war were fanned by a number of unsuccessful Hezbollah attempts
to kidnap Israeli soldiers in 2005.
“The most powerful [fake news reports] are those that rely on something existing and then
diverge from the truth,” Dr Rickli said.
“It is the same mechanism as lies – the most powerful ones are those that are building on
something real.”
There are several conflicts in the Middle East which already run hot. But what we may be
seeing, given recent events, is the emergence of fake news tactics which are not just
aimed at sowing confusion and distrust among populations, but influencing events on a
state level.
The current diplomatic crisis in the Gulf is a case in point: the three-month-old standoff
sprung, in part, from the publication of a false news story planted by hackers on a Qatari
news agency.
At the time, Qatar said that how quickly its neighbours picked up on the fake comments
about Iran and Israel from Emir Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani – and the fact several regional
outlets kept running the false remarks even after Qatar had issued a statement explaining
the hack – showed that something was amiss.
Recently divulged US intelligence appears to back up Qatar’s allegation the story was
planted by its regional rivals: officials believe that senior members of the UAE’s
government discussed the planned hacks on 23 May, the day before they occurred, and
either carried out the cyber attack themselves or used a third party.
An earlier FBI investigation found that the hack was the work of Russian hackers –
whether they were from the government, or freelancers hired by a third party, is unknown.
The Gulf dispute is ongoing, and its huge geopolitical implications are yet to be fully
understood.
If the US intel is correct, this is an instance of fake news being used to directly influence
events in the Middle East.
“[Creating] ‘alternative realities’ is the ultimate goal of post-truth politics,” Dr Rickli said.
“These Cold War-style tactics utilising the ‘force of politics’ rather than the ‘politics of force’
could be used to great effect in the region.”
Freedom on the Net 2017
Lebanon
Country Profile
STATUS:
PARTLY FREE
6.0 million
Internet Penetration:
76.1 percent
Social Media/ICT Apps Blocked:
No
Political/Social Content Blocked:
Yes
Bloggers/ICT Users Arrested:
Yes
Press Freedom Status:
Partly Free
Key Developments:
JUNE 2016–MAY 2017
Residents of Arsal, a northeastern town bordering Syria, have been unable
to access mobile internet networks for two years (see Restrictions on
Connectivity).
Lebanese civil society organizations used digital tools to organize
boycotts and call for the release of individuals wrongly detained for their
social media posts (see Digital Activism).
Activist Ahmad Amhaz was detained for seven nights in March for
ridiculing the president, prime minister, and speaker of parliament in a
Facebook post. At least two other Facebook users were detained under
harsh defamation laws (see Prosecutions and Detentions for Online
Activities).
Hackers defaced the website of the Lebanese Medical Association for
Sexual Health shortly after the organization launched a pro-LGBTI
campaign (see Technical Attacks).
Introduction:
Internet freedom declined in Lebanon due to a permanent shutdown on
mobile networks in the northeastern border town of Arsal that has deprived
its 160,000 residents of affordable internet access for two years.
Lebanese citizens have some of the worst internet speeds in the world. Civil
society activists have used social media to protest against the high cost of
mobile internet, organizing a one-day boycott of telecommunications services
in one case. But for some, internet access over mobile networks is totally
unavailable. The town of Arsal, home to a significant number of Syrian
refugees, has been without mobile internet since August 2015. Located in the
Bekaa Valley, the town has been marked by fighting from the ongoing Syrian
civil war. Access was reportedly shut down after Islamist militants captured
and killed Lebanese soldiers. 5
Activists and journalists face potential arrest, interrogation, and threats for
online speech criticizing the government, religious officials, or the army. The
Bureau of Cybercrime and Intellectual Property Rights remains highly active
in targeting activists, often in a manner that demonstrates little respect for the
rule of law. Around 50 websites have been blocked for two years, including a
lesbian community forum. In addition to content related to escort services,
gambling, or alleged child sexual abuse, 11 Israeli sites are also blocked
under an anti-Israel decree dating from 1963. Surveillance remains a strong
concern in the country, particularly given the impunity of the security forces
and a perceived lack of transparency and accountability in all areas of
government.
Obstacles to Access:
14/2514/2514/2514/25Obstacles to Access
Lebanon suffers from poor infrastructure, low internet speeds, and a digital
divide between urban and rural areas. Growth and investment in the
telecommunications market is inhibited by state-run monopolies and the
country’s general climate of dysfunction and corruption in the public sector.
Nonetheless, the new government has outlined proposals to increase internet
speeds and decrease the cost of broadband.
Availability and Ease of Access
According to the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), an estimated
76 percent of individuals used the internet in Lebanon as of 2016, a marked
increase from 52 percent in 2011. The country has 53.43 mobile broadband
subscriptions per 100 inhabitants, ranking Lebanon 73rd out of 192 countries
worldwide, a significant decrease from its rank of 57th in 2014. 6
Internet subscription prices are set by the government. In July 2014, a decree
by the Ministry of Telecommunications lowered fees on broadband by 44 to
68 percent, depending on bandwidth rates. Mobile phone providers also
7
no mention of the project this year and its website is no longer active.12
Restrictions on Connectivity
The Lebanese government maintains a monopoly over the internet backbone,
as well as over the fixed and mobile telephone industry in general, allowing it
to exercise tight control over ISPs. Lebanon has three international border
gateways—in Beirut, Jdeideh, and Tripoli—where three underwater fiber-
optic cables connect the country via the IMEWE, Cadmos, and Berytar
cables. The gateways are operated by OGERO.
16
Arsal, a border town in northeast Lebanon, has been without mobile internet
since August 2015. Home to 160,000 residents, mobile internet access was
reportedly shut down after Islamist militants captured and killed Lebanese
soldiers. While OGERO continues to operate in the town, the installation and
17
monthly fees to obtain fixed-line internet service are exorbitant for the
residents of Arsal, which has one of the highest poverty rates in the country.
For this reason, the mobile internet shutdown has effectively cut off the town.
In 2010, OGERO installed equipment to block Voice over Internet Protocol
(VoIP) throughout the network, but subsequently backed down under
pressure from businesses, civil society, and politicians. In what appears to be
an exception, the VoIP service Vonage was since blocked, although other
VoIP services such as Skype and WhatsApp are available. VoIP services are
18
restricted by law under the 2002 Telecom Act and the government has been
19
has two government-owned mobile phone companies, Alfa and Touch, which
are run by the private companies Orascom Telecom Holdings and Zain,
respectively. Because the government sets prices and issues permits for the
22
Regulatory Bodies
Lebanese media and telecommunications are regulated by two semi-
independent advisory bodies that report to the Council of Ministers. The
National Council for Audiovisual Media and the Committee for Establishing
Model Bylaws and Practices deal mainly with audiovisual media (TV, radio,
and satellite), while the Telecommunications Regulatory Authority (TRA) is
responsible for liberalizing, regulating, and developing the
telecommunications sector. In theory the TRA is independent from the
government, but in reality, dominant Lebanese political groups possess a
great deal of influence over the institution, often rendering it powerless. For27
appointed Imad Kreidieh as the new head of OGERO and Bassel Al-Ayyoubi
as director-general of investment and maintenance at the telecommunications
ministry.
Limits on Content:
12/3512/3512/3512/35Limits on Content
A forum for lesbians in the Arab region. Article 534 of the penal code
criminalizes “sexual intercourse contrary to the order of nature” with up to
one year in prison, and has been used to prosecute LGBTI (lesbian, gay,
bisexual, transgender, and intersex) individuals, though in 2017 a judge
31
sites were unlikely to feature child abuse imagery, given that they are not
censored in other countries that ban such imagery under international norms. 34
Websites are blocked by court order. The court files any complaints it
receives with the Cybercrimes Bureau for further investigation, later issuing a
final order to the Ministry of Telecommunications, which then blocks the
websites through OGERO. Website owners are not notified that their
websites have been blocked; nonetheless, they must appeal the blocking
within 48 hours in order to have it overturned. In November 2014, the head
of the Cybercrimes Bureau stated that it was monitoring terrorist content and
that it had the ability to filter this content. Digital media specialists in
35
Lebanon have expressed doubt over the bureau’s abilities in this regard,
though the overreaching intention to filter the web remains a cause for
concern for some.
YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and international blog-hosting services such as
WordPress and Blogger are freely available. In fact, Facebook, Google,
YouTube, Microsoft’s Live.com, and Wikipedia rank among the top 10 most
visited websites in Lebanon. 36
Content Removal
Government security officials periodically pressure individuals and ISPs to
remove certain comments—mainly criticism of government officials or the
army—from social media pages, blogs, or websites. Four netizens arrested
during this period were forced to remove content they had posted (see
“Prosecutions and Detentions for Online Activities”).
Information Minister Melhem Riachi one day before the decision. A press
statement from the justice ministry announced that displaying, distributing, or
circulating the music video online was strictly prohibited under penalty of
LBP 50 million ($33,105). 38
183, which states “An act undertaken in exercise of a right without abuse
shall not be regarded as an offense.” However, attitudes towards
homosexuality remain repressive in Lebanese society and pro-LGBTI groups
42
example, former Prime Minister Saad Hariri owns Future TV, al-
Mustaqbal, the Daily Star, and a host of other online and offline media
outlets. Similarly, Speaker of Parliament Nabih Berri owns National
Broadcasting Network and its affiliates, while the Shiite militant group
Hezbollah controls a vast network of media outlets, including al-Manar TV
and al-Nour radio. Dominant political figures choose the heads of these
outlets, and their news content clearly advances a particular partisan message.
While ensuring plurality, this also creates a climate in which the public
sphere is dominated by the agendas of powerful political-sectarian leaders
and their allies, suffocating the voices of those who fall outside the main
groups. At the same time, politicians are known to bribe the few independent
45
news outlets and journalists that do exist, particularly during election periods.
Independent digital media outlets struggle for sustainability due to Lebanon’s
relatively weak digital advertising market. The majority of advertising
revenue continues to come from television and other traditional media, while
digital sources only made up around 13 percent of total advertising spending
as of 2015. One of the main obstacles in boosting the digital advertising
46
Digital Activism
The use of social media for digital activism is prevalent in Lebanon.
Lebanese civil society organizations use digital tools to create online
petitions and generate campaigns calling for the release of individuals
wrongly detained for their social media posts. For example, the hashtag
#AStatusIsNotACrime began in the wake of the arrest of Bassel Amin in
December 2016 and continued to be used to campaign against other
detentions related to free speech issues (see “Prosecutions and Detentions for
Online Activities”).
In 2017, Lebanese civil society organizations also used digital
communications to organize the country’s first LGBTI sexual health week,
using videos to call out homophobia and call for the full repeal of Article
534, which criminalizes sexual relations that “contradict the laws of nature.”
48
A hashtag meaning “the last time there were elections” trended on Twitter in
March 2017 as activists and ordinary citizens aired grievances about the long-
postponed legislative elections. On June 14, parliament approved a new
49
In addition, after it was discovered that the town of Arsal has been without
internet access for years, Lebanese digital rights organization SMEX joined
Access Now’s campaign to raise awareness of internet shutdowns around the
world. 52
the Court of Cassation ruled that social media posts would not fall under the
jurisdiction of the Publications Court, but are punishable under the penal
code.54
From a legal perspective, the most serious threat to internet users and online
journalists remains the country’s slander and libel laws. Article 384 of the
penal code proscribes imprisonment of six months to two years for insulting
the president, flag, or national emblem. Articles 383 to 386 outline criminal
penalties for contempt, slander, and libel of public officials. The appeals
process is often drawn out and highly politicized. In practice, however, most
users targeted with such accusations are quickly released, or cases are
dropped under public or political pressure.
delete controversial content, and sign a letter promising not to commit further
“criminal” acts in the future. Although local activists say some cases have
reached trial, public information about their status was not available in mid-
2017. 56
Activist Ahmad Amhaz was arrested on March 21, 2017, over a Facebook
post that allegedly insulted the President under Articles 383, 384, and 386 of
the penal code. In apparent reference to President Aoun, Prime Minister
Hariri, and Speaker Berri, Amhaz stated, “There are three animals currently
ruling the country: A crocodile ... a donkey ... and one that hasn’t been
revealed yet.” He was detained for seven nights, during which time a number
of human rights and free speech organizations organized a press conference
calling for his release. On March 28, Prime Minister Saad Hariri tweeted that
57
after talking to President Aoun, both had agreed to revoke their rights in the
case. The next day, Amhaz was released on bail. Some reports indicated he
58
Hassan Saad was detained on January 28, 2017 for a Facebook post accusing
the prime minister, speaker of the house, and the president of misusing public
funds. He was charged under Article 384 of the penal code and released on
bail after spending five nights in Sidon police station. As of mid-2017, his
case was still open.60
Bassel Amin was detained on December 6, 2016 over a Facebook post that
was considered defamatory against Lebanon, the state, the flag, the president,
and the national emblem, the cedar. During his arrest, activists started a
campaign and an online petition. His post stated, “The shoes of a Syrian
61
refugee, worker and citizen are worth more than your [Lebanese] republic,
your cedar, your Lebanon, your right-wing, your independence, government,
history, and revolution and your presidents. Got it?” Bassel spent six nights
in jail before being released, but his case remained open as of mid-2017. 62
The Cybercrime Bureau arrested Ramzi al-Qadi after he tweeted that victims
of an attack on an Istanbul nightclub on New Year’s Eve deserved to die
because they were drinking. The victims included Lebanese citizens. Al-Qadi
spent over a week in custody on vague charges related to threatening civil
peace, public stability, and even terrorism, according to Major Suzan Hajj,
head of the bureau. 63
Technical Attacks
Unknown hackers defaced the website of the Lebanese Medical Association
for Sexual Health (LebMASH) shortly after the organization launched a pro-
LGBTI campaign. The website was defaced with homophobic language and
expletives against Palestine and Lebanon by hackers purporting to be from
Israel. A LebMASH board member noted the cyberattack would force the
small organization “to spend a large amount of money rebuilding and
fortifying our website.” Beyond the human rights community, Lebanon has
71
seen a 4,000 percent increase in cyberattacks over the past five years,
according to an ICT security officer working within the government. 72