Saudi Internet Activists face Crackdown
http://www.juancole.com/2013/12/48812.html
Saudi Internet Activists face Crackdown
By Juan Cole | Dec. 18, 2013
(By Human Rights Watch)
(Beirut) Activists in Saudi Arabia face a repressive and intolerant government as they advocate popular political participation, judicial reform, and an end to discrimination against women and minorities, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. Authorities have responded by arresting, prosecuting, and attempting to silence rights defenders and to quash their calls for change.
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Saudi activists are using new media to take their government to task for rampant rights abuses, said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. The Saudi authorities think they can use intimidation and prison terms to stop the criticism, but the activists are finding ways to voice their concerns until they are heard.
Several activists have used social media and online forums to build networks and initiate digital campaigns. Tens of thousands of Saudi citizens have already participated in online campaigns, including the Women2Drive initiative, which encourages Saudi women to drive in defiance of the government ban.
A number of recently established, mostly Internet-based nongovernmental human rights organizations regularly issue statements on individual cases of human rights abuses. Despite the authorities efforts to block online content, Saudis at least 49 percent of whom have Internet access use Internet forums to bypass heavily censored state media.