thoughts and observations of a privacy, security and internet researcher, activist, and policy advisor

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

"Freedom not Fear" 2009 - Protests Against the Surveillance Mania

(I have not been bloggin much here lately because I took a new job and moved to Brussels. I hope I will find more time for regular updates soon.)

On Saturday, 12 September 2009, civil liberties activists in many countries again took it to the streets under the motto "Freedom not Fear - Stop the Surveillance Mania". It was the second time these activities took place after the first international action day on 11 October 2008.

The biggest event was held in Berlin, where more than 25 000 people marched through the streets and applauded the speeches and the bands. Frank Bsirske, chairman of the world's largest trade union ver.di, called for a comprehensive law for employee and workplace privacy protection. Patrick Breyer from the working Group against Data Retention (AK Vorrat), which again had initiated the protests, reminded participants of the democratic rallies and events of 1847 and 1989 and called for continuous resistance against the surveillance state. Other speakers included Franziska Heine from the Working Group against Censorship (AK Zensur), who had organized the most successful online petition ever to the German parliament against a recent German law that permits blocking of web sites by the federal police. The event sent a strong signal to the political parties and was widely reported in the context of the upcoming German federal election. At the end of the demonstration, activists from EDRi member Chaos Computer Club were able to film a police assault on a peaceful participant. Public pressure as a result of this has now led to an announcement of the Berlin police that all officers will get mandatory name badges in early 2010.

Other activities took place in Bulgaria, Finland, Italy, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Austria, Sweden, Switzerland, the Czech Republic, and the United Kingdom. Activists had organized a plethora of events, including a full week of activities in Prague; demonstrations in Amsterdam,
Stockholm and Sofia; public teach-inns in Skopje (co-organized by EDRi member Metamorphosis), Milano, and Helsinki (co-organized by EDRi member EFFi); privacy parties and film screenings, and much more. Activists in Vienna (from EDRi member Vibe.at) reported such big interest from the population that they had to print 1000 more leaflets on the same day.
Outside of Europe, privacy activists in Guatemala joined the action day this year with a reading event from a new volume of fiction stories about surveillance, titled "stop the surveillance mania".

Links

Overview of Freedom not Fear activities

Press center for the Berlin demonstration

Report from activities in Skopje - EDRi-gram: Macedonia: Activities for
citizen education about their privacy rights (23.09.2009)

Report from activities in Vienna (only in German, 12.09.2009)

International Action Day "Freedom not Fear" (11.10.2008)

This article was also published today in the EDRi-Gram newsletter, edition 7.18

4 Comments:

Anonymous berlinerstrasse said...

Now a document about the plans of the Office for the Protection of the Constitution has been revealed dealing with new plans for surveillance. The Office wants to have access on many data which is only used by the police as for now.

25/9/09 22:17

 
Blogger Ralf Bendrath said...

This literal translation sounds a bit odd. For non-German readers: What is meant by the previous commenter is the domestic intelligence agency.

28/9/09 14:01

 
Anonymous berlinerstrasse said...

Thanks Ralf, I think the distinction between the models of different countries is too difficult for me. So could you say that NSA and CIA are a bit similar to "Verfassungsschutz" and "BND".

26/10/09 20:02

 
Blogger Ralf Bendrath said...

Not exactly, as the domestic intelligence agency is mainly working with human spies and undercover agents, not only with signals intelligence. The NSA also is a branch of the U.S. military.

But anyway, the broad message is right: They want to give the German federal domestic intelligence agency more powers than before. Bad idea.

26/10/09 21:18

 

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