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    UK riots: Don't blame social media

    LONDON, UK: Social media does not cause social problems say APC and GreenNet, following statements by, amongst others, Prime Minister David Cameron, who has condemned social networking sites for what he perceives as their role in helping rioters organise their riots.
    Looted Sainsbury's in Chalk Farm, Camden, after 2011 riots.(Image: Hugh Paul, London, via Wikimedia Commons)
    Looted Sainsbury's in Chalk Farm, Camden, after 2011 riots.(Image: Hugh Paul, London, via Wikimedia Commons)

    In the media and in public policy debates fingers were quick to point at the use of social media and mobile phones in spurring on the riots that overwhelmed several English cities last week and in helping looters evade the police.

    On Thursday 11 August Prime Minister David Cameron issued a statement condemning social networking sites, claiming that the riots were "organised via social media".

    He went on to say that his government is considering a crackdown on online communications:

    "We are working with the police, the intelligence services and industry to look at whether it would be right to stop people communicating via these websites and services when we know they are plotting violence, disorder and criminality."

    A dangerous precedent

    Such a heavy-handed approach would set a dangerous precedent by violating rights to freedom of association and expression.

    The same websites and phone networks were also used other Londoners to locate loved ones and friends, plan safe exits from trouble-spots and warn each other to stay away from dangerous areas.

    "The Prime Minister's suggestions are reactive and poorly-thought-out. They seem to be mainly designed to distract from the social and political conditions initially provoking the disorder - including youth service and Educational Maintenance Allowance cuts, class divisions and deaths in custody and at police hands," says Cedric Knight of GreenNet, APC member in the United Kingdom.

    Where's the evidence?

    Tottenham High Road after the riots. (Image: Victoria from London, via Wikimedia Commons)
    Tottenham High Road after the riots. (Image: Victoria from London, via Wikimedia Commons)
    click to enlarge

    As to turning off the mobiles of those who Cameron and co. "know" are inciting violence, what evidence will be used to determine this? Would this apply to suspects, persons charged with offences, or those convicted? And who would decide and on what grounds that a person is "known" to incite violence? How would this apply, for example, to citizen groups calling on communities to join them in protecting their homes or commercial property by physical means?

    APC and GreenNet strongly condemn the violent acts committed by looters and rioters but we also call for a measured and thorough investigation into the causes of the riots and the use of social media and mobile phone networks.

    Not the time for hasty decisions

    We urge that no new regulatory interventions be imposed until this investigation is finished, and that any proposals comply with and uphold the human rights of UK citizens. Access to communications is a basic right and there should be no "prior restraint". British laws already include powers against incitement.

    In June this year at the United Nations Human Rights Council the UK government told other governments that internet-related rights and freedom limitations on human rights (which includes internet shutdowns and blocking websites) should not be taken lightly. The UK government stated that it would only consider such drastic censorship "if convinced it is appropriate, proportionate and in accordance with international legal obligations and is effective on the basis of evidence".

    Government officials must not let the intensity of the moment drive them to make hasty decisions which could have long-term consequences for communications rights in the UK. APC and GreenNet call on the British government to stand by their statement to the UN HRC in June.

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