De groep SumOfUs bood een petitie aan, getekend door 86,000 mensen, waarin er bij Google CEO Sundar Pichai op werd aangedrongen toom een einde te maken aan ‘Project Dragonfly’.(6)

De acties in San Francisco waren onderdeel van  pareen werewereldwijde dag tvan protest tegen ‘Dragonfly’. Wereldwijd werden voor Google kantoren acties gehouden op 19 juni. Bij zeker 15 Google kantoren waren protesten, zoals in Londen, Mumbai,  New York, Parijs, Sydney en Toronto. (7)

John Jones, Campaigns and Advocacy Manager bij Free Tibet, zei: “After months of hard work, we are pleased to hear Google confirm that it has no plans to offer ‘Project Dragonfly’ in China. The Chinese Communist Party were never going to allow Google to reestablish itself in China without compromising everything positive about the Internet, from the privacy of users to free access to information. The secretive nature of the project suggests that on some level the company’s executives knew this. Thanks to the tenacity of those involved in the campaign, as well as the bravery of those Google employees who spoke out, the company has, at least for now, put these plans on hold. We will keep watch for future developments, but for the moment, it’s a time to celebrate”.

Mandie McKeown, Campagne Coordinator bij International Tibet Network zei: “This is welcome news for the Tibet freedom movement and for defenders of human rights inside Tibet, East Turkestan and China. We are proud to share this success with our allies and global Tibet Groups that have taken part in the campaign. We have been bolstered to see what we can achieve when we work together, but we will remain vigilant that Google does not renege on this position in the future. We will continue to press Google and other digital tech companies to maximise human rights policies and not bend to China’s influence.”

Teng Biao, Chinese mensenrechten-advocaat en activist, zei: “Just last week two million Hongkongers marched for their fundamental rights; the week before thousands of people around the world rallied to remember the atrocities of the 1989 Tiananmen Massacre, but because of China’s high-tech totalitarianism the majority of people living in Mainland China know nothing of these events. Google have done the right thing by stating it has “no plans” to provide technology to promote dictatorship.”

Peter Irwin, World Uyghur Congress Program Manager, zei: “Google’s recent response to sustained pressure illustrates that carefully targeted action from civil society can have a tremendous impact. It is not, however, time to take our foot off the gas. Widespread rights abuses continue to be facilitated by technology companies with no qualms working directly in support of mass surveillance, artificial intelligence and other programs designed to monitor and control the Chinese domestic population. It is incumbent upon the international business community to live up to clear human rights standards to actively avoid complicity in abuses.”

Sondhya Gupta, Campaign Manager at SumOfUs, zei: “We’re glad that growing pressure from its employees, shareholders and customers has forced Google to drop its plans for censored search engine for China. But its executives made this decision with no transparency or dialogue with those communities most affected. Google still claims to have a ‘limited presence’ in China and its failure to comment on the cyber surveillance aspects of ‘Dragonfly’ shows it’s still a long way from being accountable for the impact its products have on human rights. We’ll keep calling for the big changes the company needs.”

Bron: International Tibet Network

Notes:

(1) https://edition.cnn.com/2019/06/16/tech/google-china-ceo-sundar-pichai/index.html

Full details of the campaign can be found here: https://stopgooglecensorship.online/

(2) freetibet.orgstudentsforafreetibet.orgtibetaction.netuyghurcongress.orgsumofus.org  and other Tibet groups from International Tibet Network, a global coalition of 170 Tibet related organisations and groups worldwide – tibetnetwork.org

(3) https://theintercept.com/2018/08/01/google-china-search-engine-censorship/

(4) https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=P7K_-m7sVBc

(5) https://tibetnetwork.org/google-where-is-your-response/

(6) https://actions.sumofus.org/a/google-cancel-project-dragonfly-1

(7) A Dropbox folder of images from protests on 19 June is available here: https://www.dropbox.com/home/2019%20Google%20AGM%20-%20Tibet%20Group%20Protest%20Images