From Index on Censorship <[email protected]>
Subject A week in British politics | Art exhibition cancelled over Israel-Gaza row | Azerbaijan | Disinformation
Date July 12, 2024 1:21 PM
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Index on Censorship weekly round-up

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Friday, 12 July 2024
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Prime Minister Keir Starmer hosts his first Cabinet at 10 Downing Street. Photo: Lauren Hurley / No 10 Downing Street

It’s been a hectic week in British politics after a Labour government was elected in a landslide last week. There are reported to be 30 new bills ([link removed]) which will be announced in the King’s speech as part of the state opening of parliament ([link removed]) next Tuesday.

As our CEO Jemimah Steinfeld indicated in last week’s newsletter, we at Index are keeping a beady eye on how much new Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his government will prioritise freedom of expression at home and abroad. To help guide his thinking, we have put together this manifesto, a wishlist for freedom of expression ([link removed]) under the new government.

So far the signs are encouraging. As one of his first acts in office, the new foreign secretary David Lammy called for the immediate release of Russian-British journalist Vladimir Kara-Murza whose plight Index highlighted in April this year ([link removed]) . Kara-Murza is languishing in a Russian penal colony in Omsk and there were fears this week for his health after it was reported that he had been moved to the prison’s hospital.

Lammy said in his statement ([link removed]) : “His [Kara-Murza’s] absurd 25-year sentence shows the Kremlin’s deep fear that more Russians will know the reality of Putin’s illegal war – and is further evidence of the targeted repression of the opposition.” He also called for his lawyer to have permission to visit him, which subsequently happened ([link removed]) .

In other encouraging news for free speech in the UK, human rights lawyer Richard Hermer KC was appointed attorney general. A former colleague of Starmer’s, he will serve in government from the House of Lords. He has a distinguished career fearlessly standing up for human rights highlighted today in a Guardian profile ([link removed]) . He recently gave legal advice that the so-called BDS bill proposed by the Conservative government would stifle free speech. ([link removed]) The bill (which never became law) was introduced by the then communities secretary Michael Gove to stop local councils and other public bodies economically boycotting countries like Israel. The new solicitor general, freshly elected MP Sarah Sackman, also worked with Hermer at Matrix Chambers.

Meanwhile Index – as co-chairs of the Anti-SLAPP coalition ([link removed]) – has written a letter to the Prime Minister to ask for a bill to be introduced next Tuesday, putting protections in place which prevent Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation (SLAPPs). Legislation had been introduced as a private members bill ([link removed]) in the last parliament. It garnered cross-party support, but never became law. The letter, signed by Index’s Jessica Ní Mhainín and Nik Williams ([link removed]) , calls for that bill to be revived and strengthened. As we highlight, these kind of lawsuits not only hinder clampdowns on fraud and corruption, but silence many ordinary people including “sexual violence survivors speaking out after the police or the CPS have refused to bring criminal charges, patients of healthcare services posting reviews to
highlight concerns regarding their care, as well as members of the public scrutinising a wide variety of services they have received.” If the Labour government were to introduce a comprehensive Anti-SLAPP law early in their administration, it would be a brave and tangible indication of their commitment to free expression. In the meantime we are holding an event in Dublin on SLAPPs in October and you can sign up for tickets here ([link removed]) .

Sally Gimson, acting editor
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** Exhibition about Russian political prisoners cancelled over Israel-Gaza row
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A Russian art collective which was due to open a show in London highlighting the plight of opponents of the Putin regime claim their exhibition was cancelled at the last minute because one of them was Israeli, writes Martin Bright ([link removed]) .


** Fears mount over health of Azerbaijani political prisoner
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Last month, Ibad Bayramov – son of renowned economist and activist Dr Gubad Ibadoghlu – received a letter from a cardiologist based in the USA warning of an “imminent threat” to his father’s life.

It is just the latest development in the tragic case of the 52-year-old academic Ibadoghlu, who was arbitrarily detained alongside his wife in July 2023 on fabricated charges of producing, acquiring or selling counterfeit money.

Read the latest update here ([link removed]) .


** Report pinpoints role of likely Russian troll networks in election disinformation
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A network of accounts flooded social media with disinformation in the run-up to the European Parliamentary elections a new report has found. The accounts promoted far-right candidates and pro-Russian propaganda, writes Mark Stimpson ([link removed]) .


** Belarus | Join us on 5 August for an evening of art, activism and film
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Following a highly disputed election, Belarusian dictator Alyaksandr Lukashenka claimed victory in August 2020. Protests erupted and a vicious crackdown ensued. Four years on from the election, there are more than 1400 political prisoners in Belarus. Join Index on Censorship on Monday 5 August at St John's Waterloo for an evening of art, activism and film exploring the true stories of political dissidents behind bars. Book a free ticket here ([link removed]) .


** From the Index archives
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** God's Gift to China
by Liu Xiaobo
November 2006
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[link removed] 2006, the Chinese literary critic and Nobel Prize winner Liu Xiaobo wrote that the internet was God’s present to China ([link removed]) . As we mark the seventh anniversary of his death, we wonder whether he would feel the same way today.

Help support Index on Censorship ([link removed])
Index on Censorship defends people's freedom to express themselves without fear of harm or persecution. We publish censored writers and artists, monitor and campaign against censorship, and encourage debate.

We rely on donations from readers and supporters. By donating ([link removed]) to Index you help us to protect freedom of expression and to support those who are denied that right.
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