2013-08-08

In a joint letter, over 150 IFEX members and partners of ARTICLE 19 appealed to US President Obama to drop charges against whistleblower Edward Snowden, update the Whistleblower Protection Act and pass a media shield law. The letter, initiated by ARTICLE 19, follows:

President Barack Obama

The White House

Washington, DC, United States

CC: Attorney General Eric Holder

Secretary of State John Kerry

5 August 2013

Dear President Obama,

We are writing to you as free speech and media freedom organisations from around the world to express our strong concern over the response of the US government to the actions of whistleblower Edward Snowden. We urge you to take immediate action to protect whistleblowers and journalists.

Edward Snowden’s recent disclosures have triggered a necessary and long-delayed public debate about the acceptable boundaries of surveillance in a democratic country, a debate that on 5 June you welcomed having. The revelations brought into question the legitimacy of the secretive process of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court and closed Congressional intelligence committees as appropriate forums to determine the fundamental human rights of Americans and persons worldwide. The disclosures have clearly served the public interest, including by prompting similar debates in countries around the world.

We are, therefore, dismayed that criminal charges have been filed against Snowden, including those under the vague and overbroad Espionage Act of 1917. Statements by the State Department that Snowden is not a whistleblower simply because of the nature of the charges against him flatly contradict international standards on freedom of expression and information. Attempts to obstruct Snowden’s freedom of movement, his right to seek asylum, including the revocation of his passport, and other forms of retaliation also violate US obligations under international law.

Moreover, we are concerned that the charges against Snowden are not an isolated incident, and that there have been an unprecedented number of prosecutions against whistleblowers during your administration, as well as intrusive investigations to identify the sources of journalists reporting on matters that are in the public interest. This tendency of the US government towards obsessively controlling information flows and an aversion to public discourse is both undemocratic and unsustainable in the digital era.

Taken together, we find that these actions have set a dangerous precedent for the protection of whistleblowers and journalists worldwide. As you are aware, whistleblowers often face criminal charges when they reveal information that causes acute embarrassment to governments, to distract from the wrongdoing revealed. Similarly, journalists are also attacked for publishing the disclosed information. We are seriously concerned that governments will rely on the US example to justify attacks on whistleblowers and journalists who put themselves at significant risk to expose or report government wrongdoing, corruption, or other dangers to society.

The US has a long history of recognising the important role whistleblowers play in democracy, going back to Abraham Lincoln’s 1863 Law, the False Claims Act. While the Whistleblower Protection Act in 2009 built upon these protections, they specifically exclude protections for public interest disclosures of national security or intelligence information. While the recent Presidential Policy Directive/PPD-19 on “Protecting Whistleblowers with Access to Classified Information” and Attorney General Eric Holder’s guidance on protecting reporters’ privilege are both positive, as policy they are not binding law and provide no legal protection or remedy for whistleblowers or journalists seeking to defend information disclosures. Greater legal protections in this area are therefore needed.

We call on your administration to take the following actions:

Drop the charges with prejudice against Edward Snowden

Immediately reinstate Edward Snowden’s passport and cease attempts to obstruct his right to seek asylum in any country of his choice

Initiate an executive public consultation on the activities of the National Security Agency

Instruct the Justice Department to declassify and make public all orders issued by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act

Commit to seeking the adoption through Congress of an extension of the Whistleblower Protection Act and the reform of the Espionage Act to ensure there are appropriate and legally binding protections for whistleblowers disclosing national security and intelligence information

Continue to support the adoption by Congress of a strong and robust “media shield law” with narrow exemptions for national security information.

Yours sincerely,

ARTICLE 19

Active Watch – Media Monitoring Agency

Afghanistan Journalists Center

Africa Freedom of Information Centre

Albanian Media Institute

Aliansi Jurnalis Independen/Alliance of Independent Journalists

Association for Civil Rights

Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression

Bahrain Center for Human Rights

Cambodian Center for Human Rights

Canadian Journalists for Free Expression

Cartoonists Rights Network International

Center for Independent Journalism – Romania

Centre for Independent Journalism – Malaysia

Centro de Archivos y Acceso a la Información Pública

Centro de Reportes Informativos sobre Guatemala – CERIGUA

Centro Nacional de Comunicación Social

Derechos Digitales

Electronic Frontier Foundation

Foro de Periodismo Argentino

Foundation for Press Freedom – FLIP

Globe International

Hong Kong Journalists Association

Human Rights Network for Journalists – Uganda

Independent Journalism Center – Moldova

Index on Censorship

Initiative for Freedom of Expression – Turkey

Institute for Reporters’ Freedom and Safety

Institute for the Studies on Free Flow of Information

Institute of Mass Information

Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance

Media Institute of Southern Africa

Media Rights Agenda

National Union of Somali Journalists

Norwegian PEN

Pakistan Press Foundation

Palestinian Center for Development and Media Freedoms – MADA

PEN Canada

PEN International

Privacy International

Public Association “Journalists”

Reporters Without Borders

South East European Network for Professionalization of Media

West African Journalists Association

World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters – AMARC

OTHER SIGNATORIES:

ACCUN – Tunisian Digital Culture

Ain-O-Shalish Kendra, Bangladesh

Albanian Helsinki Committee

Alliance National Timor Leste for International Tribunal (ANTI)

Alternative Informatics Association, Turkey

ANDI – Communication and Rights, Brazil

Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development (FORUM-ASIA)

Associação Brasileira de Centros de Inclusão Digital (ABCID), Brazil

Associação Nacional para o Software Livre, Portugal

Association “Yakadha” for democracy and Civil State, Tunisia

Association for Progressive Communications (APC)

Association of Human Rights Monitors on Law Enforcement, Ukraine

ATL MST/SIDA Tunisia

Balkan Investigative Reporting Network, Kosovo

Bolo Bhi, Pakistan

Bulgarian Helsinki Committee

Burma Partnership

Bytes for All, Pakistan

Catalan PEN

Center for Development and Democratization of Institutions, Albania

Center for National and International Studies, Azerbaijan

Center for the Development of Democracy and Human Rights, Russia

Centre for Internet and Society, India

Centre for Law and Democracy, Canada

Centre for Participatory Research and Development, Bangladesh

Centro de Cultura Luiz Freire, Brazil

Centro de Estudos da Mídia Alternativa Barão de Itararé, Brazil

Centro Internacional de Estudios Superiores de Comunicación para América Latina (CIESPAL), Ecuador

ChangeMaker, Bangladesh

Christian Media Network, South Korea

Civil Coalition for the Defence of Freedom of Expression, Tunisia

COAST, Bangladesh

Computer professionals for peace and social responsibility (FIfF), Germnay

Digitalcourage e.V., Germany

Electronic Frontier Finland

English PEN

Equity BD, Bangladesh

Finnish PEN

Föreningen för Digitala Fri- och Rättigheter, Sweden

Foundation for Regional Initiatives, Ukraine

Freedom of information and expression – Marroco, Morocco

Freedom of the Press Foundation, USA

German PEN Centre

Government Accountability Project (GAP), USA

GPOPAI – Grupo de Pesquisa em Políticas Públicas para o Acesso à Informação da Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil

Grupo Medios y Sociedad (GMS), Uruguay

Helsinki Citizens’ Assembly – Vanadzor, Armenia

Helsinki committee of Armenia

Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights, Poland

Human Rights Center, Uganda

Human Rights Center of Azerbaijan

Human Rights Club, Azerbaijan

Human Rights Monitoring Institute, Lithuania

Imparsial- The Indonesian Human Rights Monitor, Indonesia

Indonesia Legal Aid Foundation (YLBHI)

INSEC- Informal Sector Service Center, Nepal

Institute for Contemporary Social and Political Studies, Slovenia

Instituto Bem-Estar Brasil

Intervozes (Brazil)

International Partnership for Human Rights (IPHR)

International Youth Human Rights Movement, Russia

Iraqi Journalists Rights Defense Association, Iraq

IT-Politisk Forening, Denmark

Judicial System Monitoring Program (JSMP), Timor Leste

Kazakhstan International Bureau for Human Rights and Rule of Law

KontraS (Commission for the Disappeared and Victims of Violence), Indonesia

KRF Public Alternative, Ukraine

La Quadrature du Net, France

Law and Society Trust (LST), Sri Lanka

Law, Internet and Society Nucleous – University of São Paulo, Brazil

Mass Media Defence Centre, Russia

Media Defence – Southeast Asia (MDSEA)

Moscow Helsinki Group

National Union of Tunisian Journalists SNJT

New Zealand PEN Centre

Notabene, Tajikistan

Odhikar, Bangladesh

Open Rights Group, UK

Panoptykon Foundation, Poland

Panos Eastern Africa

Paradigm Initiative Nigeria

PEN Center West USA

PEN International’s Swiss Romand Center

PEN Melbourne, Australia

PEN Palestine

PEN Turkey Centre

People in Need, Czech Republic

People’s Solidarity for Participatory Democracy (Center for Whistleblowers Support), South Korea

People’s Vigilance Committee on Human Rights (PVCHR), India

Plataforma Interamericana de Derechos Humanos, Democracia y Desarrollo (PIDHDD), Ecuador

Portuguese PEN Centre

Press Union and Audiovisual of Djibouti (SPAD)

Pro Media, Macedonia

Russian PEN

Samoa Observer

Samuelson-Glushko Canadian Internet Policy & Public Interest Clinic (CIPPIC)

San Miguel PEN Center, Mexico

Scottish PEN

SonTusDatos, Mexico

South African PEN Centre

SUARAM (Suara Rakyat Malaysia)

Swiss German PEN Center, Switzerland

Taiwan Association for Human Rights (TAHR)

Tanzania Human Rights Defenders’ Coalition

Think Centre, Singapore

Tunis Centre for Freedom of the Press

Tunisian Association of Women Lawyer

Tunisian Engineers Council

Tunisian Union of Free Radios STRL

Uganda Journalists Union

Union of Independent Newspapers, Tunisia

Vrijschrift, the Netherlands

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