back to article Mugabe gets email snooping green light

Zimbabwean despot "laughing" Bob Mugabe's government has rubber-stamped new laws granting his cronies free reign to snoop on communications in the impoverished state. The Harare harlequin's "Interception of Communications Bill", which was proposed last year, was waved through by his parliament last week. It hands the …

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  1. Arnold Lieberman

    Nothing to see here

    Mugabe hates the West, and we don't want to upset the Chinese so it's pretty much business as usual. No need for a boycott then.

  2. Graham Marsden

    Ah, but...

    > Mugabe's defenders claim the laws are no different to anti-terror legislation in the US and UK.

    Of course Mugabe's legislation is to protect the people from internal threats to their liberties, whereas... umm....

  3. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear

    All the “if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear “ gang can now go and live in Mugabe's Zimbabwe to experience the ultimate “ if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear ” experience

    Hopefully, Tony Blair is proud that his lead has been followed by such an illustrious politician as Zimbabwe’s Mugabe.

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Time for action yet?

    I'm still finding it hard to believe a COMMONWEALTH country is allowed to kick its people around, demolish their houses, starve them, round them up, torture and murder them, bury them under increasingly lumpy golf courses, beat the opposition leader to a pulp, imprison journalists without trial and so on, and has been for some considerable time. It's sickening and it's time it stopped.

    Zimbabwe is doubly cursed to its fate, however: it has Mugabe in power and no oil.

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    They will need far more police...

    I know that the Zimbabwe government approached a number of companies to completely revamp the the internet infrastructure for their government departments.

    they actually didn't want to upgrade, but basically start from scratch, because their equipment is so old.

    Most of the kit they have is from around 1997/98/99.

    There have been various proposals, but it appears, that they don't have the funds to actually pay for this.

    currently they have almost nothing, that could possibly filter out anything that could be potentially interesting (in terms of email and web-browsing).

    telephones have been tapped for years now, so nothing new there.

    one of the main rules of phoning zim is never to talk clear text

    having lived in zim, I now the country very well and still many contact.

    most people are against the government, even those working for the government.

    the biggest problem is, that the CIO (central intelligence organization) has infested so many parts of life, that people don't know who to trust, so nobody really does anything, because they fear that they may end up ins prison.

  6. Chad H.

    Zimbabwe is not a commonweath country

    Zimbabwe withdrew from the commonweath in 2003 after Mugabe got sick of hearing how everyone thinks his regeme stinks.

  7. Arnold Lieberman

    Re: Time for action yet?

    Trouble is, the PC brigade, and Mugabe would start screaming about colonial powers still interfering in African politics if the UK did anything to resolve this issue (and being called un-PC is the last thing any self-respecting lefty would want to happen). The EU isn't going to do anything as it is too busy making a mess of business closer to home. The UN can't even muster up enough will to prevent thousands of Africans being slaughtered in Rwanda and the US isn't going to get any support from Congress to send in troops into another potentially bloody war.

    Which leaves the African Union... which has it's fair share of dictators who are Mugabe's chums. Meanwhile, the most powerful country in the region, South Africa, dows nothing useful.

  8. Morely Dotes

    Which Commonwealth country would that be, then?

    "I'm still finding it hard to believe a COMMONWEALTH country is allowed to kick its people around, demolish their houses, starve them, round them up, torture and murder them, bury them under increasingly lumpy golf courses, beat the opposition leader to a pulp, imprison journalists without trial and so on, and has been for some considerable time. It's sickening and it's time it stopped."

    Oh, the UK. That's sorted, then.

  9. John A Blackley

    And.........?

    "All the “if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear “ gang can now go and live in Mugabe's Zimbabwe to experience the ultimate “ if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear ” experience"

    And where will the perspective-challenged, "Mugabe's powers are exactly equivalent to Blair's" lot go to?

  10. Rob

    Do they still have access anyway?

    I thought they'd gone dark last year?

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/09/20/zimbabwe_internet_fiasco/

    Did someone pay the bill?

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