By Kate Begley, BSc Politics and International Relations Student at Bristol University
Source: (Facebook, 2020a)
‘Is Connectivity a Human Right?’
Many have concerns about hate speech on social media and the extent to which it fuels ethnic and religious tensions on the continent. Tensions between a Christian majority and the Muslim minority in Kenya are focused on issues such as homosexuality, abortion and constitutional questions (Green, 2014). A Pew Research study found that between 2007-2012 Kenya saw the second-highest increase in restrictions on religious freedoms (Ibid). The research included ‘social hostilities’ to religious expressions as well as state control. An eruption of sectarian violence after the 2007 Kenyan elections set a precedent. Text messaging services were used to incite violence in this case as radio broadcasts were used in the 1994 Rwandan genocide. The internet, fuelled by hate speech and unchecked ‘fake news’, presents new opportunities to incite violence (van Niekerk and Maharaj, 2013). This problem is not easy to address, and Facebook will struggle to monitor content in societies with pronounced linguistic diversity.
The clear benefits of internet access have led some to herald it a human right. Facebook has continued its investment in universal internet coverage. Still, critics are concerned that in striving to deliver connectivity and growth, Facebook might neglect the political and personal consequences they will have. We have seen how the proliferation of hate speech and Facebook’s capacity to deal with the problem (any better than they have in the West) threatens the escalation of ethnic and religious tensions in Kenya and beyond. Facebook’s position of power in Eastern Africa and among its leadership worries some critics. As ‘digital colonialists’ such as Facebook continue their expansion it is essential that governments in Africa and the international community stay vigilant for the effect they are having on the ground, and the consequences it has for the dynamics of power on the continent.
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Green, M. (2014) ‘From social hostility to social media: Religious pluralism, human rights and democratic reform in Africa’, African Human Rights Law Journal, 14, pp. 93–125.
van Niekerk, B. and Maharaj, M. (2013) ‘Information-Based Conflict in Africa’, Scientia Militaria, 41, pp. 24–41. doi: 10.5787/41-2-1066.
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