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An Internet censorship banner in Iran |
Judicial
authorities in Iran admit to blocking access to more than 5 million websites
deemed immoral or antisocial.
Iranian
media this week quoted Abdol Samad Khorram Abadi, an adviser to Iran's
prosecutor-general, as saying the country's enemies "seek to assault our
religious identity by exploiting the Internet."
In
reality, Iranian Internet users say, officials are mostly targeting independent
news sources, as well as political, social, and music websites.
Iran is home to one of the largest populations of web users in the Middle East,
with some 15 percent of the population having access to the Internet.
And, as
the Internet becomes increasingly important in the lives of many Iranians –
especially the younger generation – Iranian authorities have been restricting
access to the free flow of information.
Tehran's
clampdown began just after the millennium, as the country began experiencing a
surge in Internet usage.
Laws For Internet Usage
Since then, Iranian authorities have introduced at least three sets of rules and
regulations restricting the use of the Internet for readers, bloggers, and
online activists, as well as for Internet cafe owners and Internet Service
Providers (ISPs).
According
to Iranian law, every ISP must be approved by the Ministry of Culture and
Islamic Guidance. They are also required to install special filters to control
the content of websites and e-mails passing through their network.
ISPs that
fail to comply with these rules face heavy penalties or closure. At least 10
ISPs in Iran have reportedly been closed for failing to install content-control
software.
In
addition, every website in Iran is required to register with the Culture
Ministry.
Hessam,
an Internet cafe owner in Tehran, tells
RFE/RL's Radio
Farda that the registration procedure is extremely complicated and
is designed to discourage people from creating new websites.
"For
instance, young underground musicians want to create a website to find an
audience through the Internet, because their music is banned and the Internet is
the only option for them," says Hessam. "Or an independent journalist wants to
set up a website to publish his articles. But they all have to get permission
from the authorities first."
The
Paris-based watchdog Reporters Without Borders has labeled Iran as one the
world's "worst enemies of the Internet."
Despite
all the restrictions, however, Iranian web users still manage to access blocked
or filtered websites using proxy servers.
According
to Bobak, an Iranian Internet user, the authorities' filters and other obstacles
to block people's access to the Internet simply don't work.
(Radio Farda correspondent Roozbeh Bolhari contributed to this report)
Copyright (c) 2008 RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org
... Payvand News - 11/22/08 ...
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