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Monday, November 26, 2007
Doug Wilson :: Townhall.com Columnist
A Victory For Freedom
by Doug Wilson
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Democracy scored a huge victory earlier this month, one that the media has largely overlooked. Yahoo Inc., the Internet company made famous by their search engine, settled out of court with two Chinese journalists who sued the company under U.S. human rights laws for providing the Chinese government with identifying information about their Internet use.

One of the journalists, Wang Xiaoning, is an editor of several publications that advocate for democracy in China and was arrested in 2002 after police raided his home. Charged with government subversion, Xiaoning was sentenced to jail. Advocacy groups that received word of the arrest thought it bizarre that Xiaoning was found so quickly by the Chinese police, though he had anonymously sent his pro-democracy writings. According to the lawsuit, Yahoo gave Xiaoning’s e-mail records to local authorities.

Shi Tao’s case is equally bothersome. A poet and journalist, Tao was detained in 2004 after he sent an e-mail that exposed increased censorship around the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square protests to Democracy Forum, a joint venture of the National Endowment for Democracy and the Foreign Policy Association that brings together scholars, activists, and policy makers to promote democratic efforts worldwide. Yahoo also released the information that led to his arrest.

Today, both men are serving 10-year sentences in Chinese prisons.

At first glance, it might seem easy to sympathize with Yahoo. If the Chinese government subpoenas information from a business operation in China, one might think that the company is obligated to comply—and that was exactly Yahoo’s argument. They claimed their local affiliate was simply following orders from local law enforcement.

What they didn’t know was that a U.S. law has been in place for over 200 years that lays the groundwork for punishing corporations for human rights violations abroad. They also failed to realize the wrath they would invite upon themselves from the U.S Congress, including both Democrats and Republicans, such as Chris Smith, Dana Rohrbacher, and Tom Lantos.

Human Rights USA (www.humanrightsusa.org), an organization of attorneys committed to combating torture and related discrimination in America and by American companies worldwide, represented the two journalists and, in doing so, gave a voice to the men imprisoned for rejecting China’s one-party, communist government. (Full disclosure: My brother, Rick, is a board member of Human Rights USA.)

Human Rights USA made a straightforward case against Yahoo, outlined in part on their website: “By turning over identifying information about its customers, Yahoo is enabling serious human rights abuses such as torture, forced labor, and arbitrary and prolonged detention based on the exercise of free speech and free press rights.” The lawyer from Human Rights USA who represented the journalists hopes that Yahoo will pressure the Chinese government to release the journalists now that the case has been settled.

Human Rights USA is an important organization whose good work expands far beyond the Yahoo case. Refugee women who want to spare their daughters from sexual abuse have earned the right to do so; the work of Human Rights USA directly resulted in the court decision that established that female genital mutilation qualifies as torture. Their work on another case set a precedent that the usual deadline to file asylum claims need not apply to sexual abuse victims with severe traumatic stress, who might hesitate to report such instances out of fear.

Some conservative groups don’t approve of all Human Rights USA’s work, but surely they can support these particular instances of noble work on behalf of freedom. Continued...

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About The Author

Doug Wilson is the the co-author, with Edwin Feulner, of Getting America Right: The True Conservative Values Our Nation Needs Today.

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American and multinationals
Yahoo did what it did because it wanted to continue the relationship with China (which by the way can't be accurately described as communist). And it is not only Yahoo. UPS in 2001 went ahead with its China service kickoff despite the fact that China held the crew of the EP-3 Orion that was forced to land at Lingshui on Hainan Island after a PLAAF J-8 fighter crashed into it over the South China Sea. The Americans were basically being held as hostages, but that didn't bother UPS--which is why I would ship with anyone BUT UPS and if a company deserves to go out of business, it is this one.

Google on Google Earth changed from its label of Taiwan from Taiwan to Taiwan, Province of China after China complained.

Look people who run corporations would sell their daughters into prostitution if they thought it would improve the bottom line. Something as trival as selling out some democracy activists means nothing to them. And don't expect Yahoo and the rest of the cabal of greed that make up the multinationals to change just because a few in Congress complain.

My hope is, if China does fold, when these entities come to the Congress to bail them out, that Congress tells them to go rot and let them fail as well.


What about Google & Yahoo spying on us?
If Google and Yahoo are amoral to the extent that they would spy on innocent people in China and send them to torture and death, they clearly would not hesitate to spy on us. We know how easy that would be. Every single email you have sent, every web search yours, dear reader, is now filed away in China.

Think of the huge leverage this gives them on every Congressman and Senator with any personal eccentricity or peccadillo ever expressed via the Internet. Are Yahoo and Google doing this now? What fool would even entertain the idea that they are not?

Millions of ordinary citizens in this country now have dossiers in China. Whenever our new masters need a specific U.S. citizen’s "cooperation" that person can expect a phone call or maybe an email.
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