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Jeudi 14 juin 2007

Procès de journalistes contre Yahoo! se développe

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Le journaliste chinois emprisonné Shi Tao cherche la compensation des États-Unis principaux Compagnie d'Internet pour l'identifier au gouvernement

Par Mélisse Wang
Auteur de personnel d'AsiaMedia

Shi Tao, un journaliste chinois emprisonné et poèt, a joint les États-Unis procès contre Yahoo! Inc. pour fournir des informations d'utilisateur au gouvernement chinois. Le procès, intenté par l'organisation du monde pour les droits de l'homme Etats-Unis en avril, réclame ce Yahoo! s'identifiant l'information des utilisateurs d'Internet aux autorités chinoises qui ont mené à l'arrestation de plusieurs dissidents chinois, y compris Shi.

Shi, un ancien auteur pour la publication financière Informations commerciales contemporaines and a recipient of this year’s Golden Pen of Freedom Award, was sentenced to ten years in prison by a Chinese court in 2004 for giving state secrets to foreigners via his Yahoo! email account. He joins dissident Wang Xiaoning, imprisoned in 2003 for subversion, and Wang’s wife in seeking compensation from the California-based Internet company for helping in the Chinese government to convict them.

Shi’s conviction stemmed from an e-mail that he sent to a pro-democracy group in the United States regarding media restrictions in China. Yahoo! gave Shi’s anonymous Internet user ID and the location from where he sent his e-mails to the Chinese government upon request. Yahoo! maintains that it had to comply with local laws and hand over the information.

“Companies doing business in China must comply with Chinese law or its local employees could be faced with civil and criminal penalties,” Yahoo! said in a statement.

“Yahoo is distressed that citizens in China have been imprisoned for expressing their political views on the Internet,” the statement said. “We believe deeply in human rights, and as a company built on openness, we strongly support free expression and privacy globally.”

But the World Organization for Human Rights USA disagrees.

“We are filing this lawsuit because Yahoo! should not just give up their user information. This means that Yahoo is giving up free speech,” Morton Sklar, Executive Director of nonprofit group filing the suit, told AsiaMedia on the phone from Washington, DC. “Yahoo! needs to follow the U.S. and international laws regarding human rights. It should not simply follow whatever the Chinese government demands.”

The suit seeks an end Yahoo!’s practice of divulging Internet user information when human rights violations could result and asks that the company assist in securing the release of prisoners that it helped to jail, including Shi.

“Shi Tao’s participation is symbolic. It demonstrates that the practices of Yahoo! do not just affect two or three people. It affects many more,” Sklar said.

On Tuesday, Yahoo! shareholders rejected a proposal by the company to stop revealing user information or to develop a committee to review its policies in China with regards to human rights. Yesterday, Reuters reported that Flickr.com, an online photo-sharing site owned by Yahoo!, was blocked in China, possibly to keep Internet users from accessing images of the June 4 Tiananmen Square massacre.

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  • This entry was posted on Thursday, June 14th, 2007 at 10:10 pm and is filed under Media, Human Rights . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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