Zambia has studied the Uganda social media tax and will draft what it
Social media should have brought more freedom of speech to Africans, but governments seem bent on gagging online expression.
First
Tanzania forced bloggers to pay $900 a year, then Uganda imposed a tax on
social media use. Cameroon regularly blacks out the internet to suppress
dissent in its Anglophone regions. Now Zambia’s government plans to enforce new
rules to regulate social media use in the country where observers are
increasingly concerned about Zambians’ shrinking freedoms.
Zambia
plans to introduce stricter regulations for social media usage, communications
minister Brian Mushimba told parliament on Thursday July 5. The new regulations
are aimed at fighting cyber crime and reduce online pornography, he said,
according to an AFP report.
“It is
evident that social media in Zambia has become a catalyst for the detachment of
members of the Zambian society from our cultural norms,” Mushimba told
parliament. “Prior to the proliferation of social media, people in Zambia
behaved and communicated within acceptable and expected cultural boundaries.”
It is
unclear, however, whether a new set of laws will be drafted. Mushimba said
Zambia already had adequate laws to police online behavior, according to a
report in the Lusaka Times. Instead, his department would focus on sensitizing
Zambians about responsible use of social media, but would not hesitate to
prosecute perceived misuse.
Yet in
January, Mushimba said he’d planned to introduce three new bills that would
lead to the “productive use of internet and social media,” also according to a
Lusaka Times report. The bills dealt with cyber security and cyber crime,
e-commerce and data protection. A similar bouquet of bills has been used in
other African states to black out the internet, so Zambians tweeting with the
hashtag #OpenSpaceZM have reason to be concerned.
This
week, Mushimba assured Zambians that the country would not be following
Uganda’s example. The Zambian government had no plans to introduce a levy on
social media because the country already has enough laws to protect Zambians,
he said. New policies would not infringe on Zambians’ rights, Mushimba added.
The lack of clarity around the new regulations means the process could be drawn
out or become obfuscated, making it difficult for Zambians to respond.
While
the discussion took place in a parliamentary debate, there is still concern
that Zambia’s space for public discourse is shrinking. In the current political
climate, opposition politicians were arrested and harassed under arbitrary laws
and critical newspapers have been silenced using the tax system. If Zambia
clamps down on social media and curtails citizens’ freedom of speech, it will
probably be completely legal.
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