The Sunday Mail

NEW: Surveillance laws are failing to protect privacy rights: what we found in six African countries 

 Tony Roberts  

On paper, privacy rights for citizens of countries throughout Africa are well protected. Privacy rights are written into constitutions, international human rights conventions and domestic law.

But, in the first comparative review of privacy protections across Africa, the evidence is clear: governments are purposefully using laws that lack clarity. Or they ignore laws completely in order to carry out illegal digital surveillance of their citizens.

What’s more, they are doing so with impunity.

This matters because people’s lives are increasingly being lived online, through conversations on social media, online banking and the like.

We’ve just published research on privacy protections in six African countries – Egypt, Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa and Sudan. And the evidence is clear: governments are using laws that lack clarity, or ignoring laws completely, to carry out illegal surveillance of their citizens.

Those targeted include political opponents, business rivals and peaceful activists. In many cases they were conducting mass surveillance of citizens.

Our report finds that existing surveillance law is being eroded by six factors: