Posted by Williammalecela.com on Wednesday, April 08, 2015
Cyber Law now Set for Court Battle
Human
rights activists have declared they would go to court to file a
petition challenging the newly-passed Statistics and Cybercrime bills in
case they are signed into law.
The country co-ordinator for the Human Rights Defenders Coalition
(THRDS), Mr Onesmo Ole Ngurumwa told The Citizen yesterday that a
combination of human rights groups are working on the possibility of
going to court in the event of President Jakaya Kikwete appending his
signature to the bills.
“We have not sent any notice directly to the government because we
consider issuing a press statement the fastest way of airing our
concern,” he said.
He said they are sorting out some few things as they await government
response while pondering their next move, which would entail going to
court should their appeal go unheeded to.
“The statement we issued is enough to let the powers-that-be know what
the public feels… we have not heard any feedback from the government up
now, but we are still waiting while hoping the President won’t sign the
bills as they would undermine many good things that he often says he
stands,” said Mr Ngurumwa.
In a joint statement that a coalition of NGOs issued last week, the
activists call for a united rebuff of the offending bills by all other
human rights stakeholders, noting that if they become laws, they will
steeply stifle the people’s constitutional rights. They urged President
Kikwete not to endorse them for doing so would stifle citizen journalism
and whistleblowing as well as adding draconian laws to the already
existing ones.
The statement was signed by THRDS, Sikika, Tanzania Gender Networking
Programme (TGNP) Jamii Forums and the Tanzania Network of Legal Aid
Providers (TANLAP).
They argue that the Statistics Bill gives excessive powers to the
National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) and by signing into law such a
document, then the country would effectively disqualify any research
information given by other institutions and academic centres, something
they said is not expected in a democratic country like Tanzania.
Mr Ngurumwa told journalists last week that the Statistics Bill, for
example, calls for any data to be approved by NBS and that it has
indicated a heavy punishment to media houses, NGOs and academic
institutions unless they first present their findings to NBS for
verification.
He said in total the law has come to erase and discourage any research work done by private and public institutions.
Source:The Citizen
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