At HRC 43, Violations of Privacy Rights in the UAE

Today, an oral intervention was delivered at the 43rd session of the United Nations Human Rights Council, under Item 3 in the Interactive Dialogue with the Special Rapporteur on the Right to Privacy. The intervention focused on the negative impact of cyber surveillance on privacy rights in the United Arab Emirates.

Please continue reading for the full text of the statement, or click here for a PDF of the remarks.

 

Mr. President,

We would like to bring to the attention of the negative impact that cyber surveillance plays on privacy rights in the United Arab Emirates.

The UAE government built and maintains a sophisticated cyber surveillance framework from which it spies on its citizens. Using this framework, the State monitors every citizen, and has hacked hundreds of phones to obtain emails, location, text messages, and photographs of activists and anyone critical of the government.

One of those hacked phones belonged to Ahmed Mansoor, a human rights defender in the UAE. A recent Reuters report on “Project Raven” showed that the State hacked his computer in 2013 and his cell phone in 2016. In 2017, he was sentenced to 10 years in prison and fined one-million dirhams on charges of using social media to publish “false information” and insulting the “status and prestige of the UAE and its symbols.”

With recent reports we have learned that the UAE has extended these cyber attacks outside its borders, hacking phones of individuals in Qatar, Yemen, Bahrain, Iran and Turkey, as well as journalists in the United States and United Kingdom, human rights activists, and diplomats.

It is imperative that the international community, including UN mechanisms and this Council, act to address the widespread governmental assault on the privacy rights of journalists, human rights defenders, and ordinary citizens in the UAE and globally. What steps would you recommend the UAE take to better protect its citizens’ privacy rights?

Thank you.