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Robert Fisk: Caught in the deadly web of the internet

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  • Robert Fisk: Caught in the deadly web of the internet

    Robert Fisk: Caught in the deadly web of the internet
    Any political filth or personal libel can be hurled at the innocent

    Published: 21 April 2007

    Could it possibly be that the security men who guard the frontiers of
    North America are supporting Holocaust denial? Alas, it's true. Here's
    the story.

    Taner Akcam is the distinguished Turkish scholar at the University of
    Minnesota who, with immense courage, proved the facts of the Armenian
    genocide - the deliberate mass murder of up to a million and a half
    Armenians by the Ottoman Turkish authorities in 1915 - from Turkish
    documents and archives. His book A Shameful Act was published to great
    critical acclaim in Britain and the United States.

    He is now, needless to say, being threatened with legal action in Turkey
    under the infamous Law 301 - which makes a crime of insulting
    "Turkishness" - but it's probably par for the course for a man who was
    granted political asylum in Germany after receiving an eight-year prison
    sentence in his own country for articles he had written in a student
    journal; Amnesty International had already named him a prisoner of
    conscience.

    But Mr Akcam has now become a different kind of prisoner: an inmate of
    the internet hate machine, the circle of hell in which any political
    filth or personal libel can be hurled at the innocent without any
    recourse to the law, to libel lawyers or to common decency. The
    Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink was misquoted on the internet for
    allegedly claiming that Turkish blood was "poisonous"; this total lie -
    Dink never said such a thing - prompted a young man to murder him in an
    Istanbul street.

    But Taner Akcam's experience is potentially far more serious for all of
    us. As he wrote in a letter to me this month, "Additional to the
    criminal investigation (law 301) in Turkey, there is a hate campaign
    going on here in the USA, as a result of which I cannot travel
    internationally any more... My recent detention at the Montreal airport
    - apparently on the basis of anonymous insertions in my Wikipedia
    biography - signals a disturbing new phase in a Turkish campaign of
    intimidation that has intensified since the November 2006 publication of
    my book."

    Akcam was travelling to lecture in Montreal and took the Northwest
    Airlines flight from Minneapolis on 16 February this year. The Canadian
    immigration officer, Akcam says, was "courteous" - but promptly detained
    him at Montreal's Trudeau airport. Even odder, the Canadian immigration
    officer asked him why he needed to be detained. Akcam tells me he gave
    the man a brief history of the genocide and of the campaign of hatred
    against him in the US by Turkish groups "controlled by ... Turkish
    diplomats" who "spread propaganda stating that I am a member of a
    terrorist organisation".

    All this went on for four hours while the immigration officer took notes
    and made phone calls to his bosses. Akcam was given a one-week visa and
    the Canadian officer showed him - at Akcam's insistence - a piece of
    paper which was the obvious reason for his temporary detention.

    "I recognised the page at once," Akcam says. "The photo was a still from
    a 2005 documentary on the Armenian genocide... The still photo and the
    text beneath it comprised my biography in the English language edition
    of Wikipedia, the online encyclopedia which anyone in the world can
    modify at any time. For the last year ... my Wikipedia biography has
    been persistently vandalised by anonymous 'contributors' intent on
    labelling me as a terrorist. The same allegations has been repeatedly
    scrawled, like gangland graffiti, as 'customer reviews' of my books at
    Amazon."

    Akcam was released, but his reflections on this very disturbing incident
    are worth recording. "It was unlikely, to say the least, that a Canadian
    immigration officer found out that I was coming to Montreal, took the
    sole initiative to research my identity on the internet, discovered the
    archived version of my Wikipedia biography, printed it out on 16
    February, and showed it to me - voilà! - as a result."

    But this was not the end. Prior to his Canadian visit, two
    Turkish-American websites had been hinting that Akcam's "terrorist
    activities" should be of interest to American immigration authorities.
    And sure enough, Akcam was detained yet again - for another hour - by US
    Homeland Security officers at Montreal airport before boarding his
    flight at Montreal for Minnesota two days later.

    On this occasion, he says that the American officer - US Homeland
    Security operates at the Canadian airport - gave him a warning: "Mr
    Akcam, if you don't retain an attorney and correct this issue, every
    entry and exit from the country is going to be problematic. We recommend
    that you do not travel in the meantime and that you try to get this
    information removed from your customs dossier."

    So let's get this clear. US and Canadian officials now appear to be
    detaining the innocent on the grounds of hate postings on the internet.
    And it is the innocent - guilty until proved otherwise, I suppose - who
    must now pay lawyers to protect them from Homeland Security and the
    internet. But as Akcam says, there is nothing he can do.

    "Allegations against me, posted by the Assembly of Turkish American
    Associations, Turkish Forum and 'Tall Armenian Tale' (a Holocaust denial
    website) have been copy-pasted and recycled through innumerable websites
    and e-groups ever since I arrived in America. By now, my name in close
    proximity to the English word 'terrorist' turns up in well over 10,000
    web pages."

    I'm not surprised. There is no end to the internet's circle of hate.
    What does shock me, however, is that the men and women chosen to guard
    their nations against Osama bin Laden and al-Qa'ida are reading this
    dirt and are prepared to detain an honourable scholar such as Taner
    Akcam on the basis of it.

    I don't think the immigration lads are to blame. I once remember
    listening to a Canadian official at Toronto airport carefully explaining
    to a Palestinian visitor that he was not required to tell any police
    officer about his religion or personal beliefs, that he should feel safe
    in Canada.

    No, it's their bosses in Ottawa and Washington I wonder about. Put very
    simply, how much smut are the US and Canadian immigration authorities
    taking off the internet? And how much of it is now going to be flung at
    us when we queue at airports to go about our lawful business?

    http://news.independent.co.uk/world/fis k/article2469270.ece
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