Crystal, Actually, the right to assemble, discuss in public and protest was never taken away by the Patriot act. Numerous protests and marches have taken place over the Iraq war, Immigration etc since then and have been widely covered. Indeed if one was pay a visit to the environs of the White house, one will find no shortage of protesters demonstrating any number of issues from Guantanamo by dressing in orange jump suits and locking themselves in cages, Darfur, Tibetans acting out torture methods, to calling the current US administration fascist or for its removal as long as they do not interfere with others freedoms by being disruptive. The Patriot Act still stands to date, however a few of its provisions have sunset and are no longer in law thanks to a refined legislative process that pays attention to constituents views. The separation of powers principle is best exemplified in the US. The Judiciary's independence is one that should be emulated in Kenya. The fact that unconstitutional laws can be challenged and struck down by the courts is itself a protection against the infringement of citizen and non-citizens rights. Take for instance cases such as that of Bin Laden's driver (Hamdan v. Rumsfeld) or the 5 Algerian Guantanamo detainees where the US Government did not win in both cases. The fact that members of congress have signaled their intent to restore habeus corpus rights to detainees is in itself an indication of standing up for principle even when popular opinion may not agree with some principles of basic human rights. There is a lot of work and reform to be done locally, in ensuring that the different arms of Government can be as independent and those who are aggrieved by the legislature at least have an avenue of resort in which they can place their confidence to fairly strike down what could be considered unconstitutional. At the same time excessive freedom and its abuse is dangerous, were Kenya the US, elements of the media who engaged in deliberate acts at the beginning of the year would be in court today being held civilly liable for their role in inciting violence that led to the deaths of civilians. Media elements that act recklessly and carry inappropriate content would be paying hefty fines that could easily bankrupt them if they chose not change their ways. Yet we find that even with such regulations, the US media has a level of freedom that is not quite paralleled around the world. I believe it is clear that the contentious section 88 has always been present, it is not new, and thus the Government cannot possibly be trying to now use it to suppress the people's voices. As with every system there need to be checks and balances, the media has called for deletion, an approach that faces legal hurdles, but the media has not been seen to come up with clear cut alternatives such as amendments that could make it very difficult if not impossible for section 88 to be abused, these are the checks the media could be lobbying for placement in the memorandum. The media fraternity might not be law makers but they could certainly spend amounts such as the Ksh. 2m spent on advertising a prayer meeting to explain in layman terms what *alternatives* as protections they want to be included in the bill. One way or another there will be laws that deal with the media, a reality the media should accept and work towards defining rather than wishing the inevitable goes away. On Mon, Dec 15, 2008 at 11:23 AM, Crystal Watley <crystal@voicesofafrica.org
wrote:
The Patriot Act was established in the United States in light of terrorist activities and the Iraqi war to silence any public discussion or protest. The US government was able to make a list of organizations and people they considered to be "terrorists" and to use a variety of means powers to contain those they believed to be "dangerous to US interests". This Act was used to arrest many peaceful protesters, environmental activists, and to detain Muslims without trial for extended period of time at places like Guantanamo Bay. Every democratic government must respect human rights. The Patriot Act was a time bound piece of legislature and it has thus lapsed. Democratic governments should not attempt to use legislation to suppress the voice of the people. Kenya is not the only country where a minority of the population with vested interests have attempted and have often succeeded to dominate and control the population. We should learn from the lessons of history, rather than repeat the same mistakes.
Crystal
On Mon, Dec 15, 2008 at 7:35 PM, <bitange@jambo.co.ke> wrote:
David, I thought this UK law would make our section 88 look like an evening game of soccer. From the Independent.
23 November 2003
Sweeping measures to deal with terrorist attacks and other emergencies are to be announced this week, giving the Government power to over-ride civil liberties in times of crisis, and evacuate threatened areas, restrict people's movements and confiscate property.
The Civil Contingencies Bill, which covers every kind of disaster from terrorism to the weather, will be the biggest shake-up of emergency laws since the early part of the last century, replacing legislation which saw the UK through a world war and the IRA bombing campaign.
Some of the proposals in the draft version of the Bill, drawn up in the summer, have alarmed civil rights activists, notably a clause that gives the Government the power to suspend parts or all of the Human Rights Act without a vote by MPs.
Once an emergency has been proclaimed by the Queen, the Government can order the destruction of property, order people to evacuate an area or ban them from travelling, and "prohibit assemblies of specified kinds" and "other specified activities".
If these rules had been in force during the Iraq war, critics say, they could have been used to to ban street demonstrations, making anyone who travelled to protest guilty of a criminal offence. After a major terrorist attack, forums made up of local councils, the emergency services and utility companies would be put in charge of trying to get shattered communities back together.
Ndemo.
Ok. Thanks.
Sent from my BlackBerry(R) wireless device
-----Original Message----- From: bitange@jambo.co.ke
Date: Mon, 15 Dec 2008 19:12:04 To: <dmakali@yahoo.com> Cc: <bitange@jambo.co.ke>; KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions<kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Subject: Re: [kictanet] [ke-internetusers] Kenya communications(amendment)Bill: Is media overacting?
David, There was a hitch. It will be in all papers tomorrow and will ensure you get the soft copy.
Ndemo.
I have treid to find the amended bill online with no success; was it uploaded as promised? someone please? david
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--- On Mon, 12/15/08, bitange@jambo.co.ke <bitange@jambo.co.ke> wrote:
From: bitange@jambo.co.ke <bitange@jambo.co.ke> Subject: Re: [kictanet] [ke-internetusers] Kenya communications(amendment)Bill: Is media overacting? To: dmakali@yahoo.com Cc: "KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions" <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Date: Monday, December 15, 2008, 1:04 AM Mike, Thank you for your objective views. You know very well that there are thousands of youth out there who have patiently waited for this bill to allow them trade on-line. Now Media calls theirs.
The outcomes of the Kriegler and Waki would hopefully deal with political impunity. Who will deal with media impunity? In my view we must push this Bill to ensure that electronic media does not continue to corrupt our children's minds.
Ndemo.
Dr. Ndemo,
I hope that the media note that they are on the wrong path and move to change their approach. In hindsight they might realize that the issues at hand could have been tackled differently.The media's most recent actions only make it more difficult to resolve the very same issues they are protesting.
The Nation's editorial perhaps represents the divergence in views between the media owners, their supporters and responsible journalists who may have seen that things are steering in a dangerous direction. As the matter drags on, various elements will try to take advantage and jump onto the bandwagon to further certain agendas. It is this catalyst that is worrisome, as there is the possibility that just as the media issue has somehow been tied to economic issues, the media issue could easily be misused by those who have little to do with the media.
The country has many volatile problems that should not be exploited, some of those jumping onto the media bandwagon may be seeking to detract from matters facing them, others have personal agendas in mind that can only progress if they are disguised as media and economic issues. The media hopefully is looking at these issues in a responsible manner, will exercise diplomacy and engage the Government in a civil way as the best way to resolve the impasse. There are many Kenyans suffering today from matters not within their control, it is a dangerous thing for the media to act in a way that could easily stir these masses to non-civil action as measures are being taken to alleviate these problems. The media has a corporate responsibility in ensuring that it exhausts all civil means of ensuring the matters are resolved.
It is encouraging to know that the Government is open for discussion, but there is only so much that the Government can do on legislative matters. The Government can draft, prepare and adjust laws but it cannot pass the same in parliament. The media must do more on its own in approaching not just key leaders but ultimately the legislators who actually vote to pass the same laws.
On Sun, Dec 14, 2008 at 5:11 PM, <bitange@jambo.co.ke> wrote:
> Thanks Theuri, > Since Government is open for discussion, diplomacy would yield better > results. I have seen their action plan which by the way violates cck > licence agreement it is not the best rout to take. Having spent all > weekend > using public resources (frequencies) to propagate violence, they should > at > least wait to hear from cck. > > If you read today's Nation editorial on how to end impunity including > media > impunity you wonder if they are the same people inciting the public to > violence. > > Ndemo > Sent from my BlackBerry(R) > > -----Original Message----- > From: "Mike Theuri" <mike.theuri@gmail.com> > > Date: Sun, 14 Dec 2008 13:19:01 > To: <bitange@jambo.co.ke> > Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions<kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> > Subject: Re: [kictanet] [ke-internetusers] Kenya communications > (amendment)Bill: Is media overacting? > > > _______________________________________________ > kictanet mailing list > kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke > http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet > > This message was sent to: bitange@jambo.co.ke > Unsubscribe or change your options at >
http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/bitange%40jambo.co.ke
> >
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