It’s possible that I shall make an ass of myself. But in that case one can always get out of it with a little dialectic. I have, of course, so worded my proposition as to be right either way (K.Marx, Letter to F.Engels on the Indian Mutiny)
Wednesday, December 13, 2023
UK
WILDCAT! GENERAL STRIKE
Trade unions declare war on Tory anti-strikes law at special congress
"Real solidarity to push this back may take us outside the law”
Hundreds of trade unionists met for a ‘once in a generation’ meeting held by the Trades Union Congress (TUC) where they committed to a coordinated campaign to directly resist the government’s anti-strikes law.
It marked the first special congress called by the TUC in over 40 years, with the last in 1982 over Margaret Thatcher’s anti-union legislation.
Now the UK is left with some of the harshest trade union laws in Europe, with the Tory’s new Minimum Service Levels Act making it even more restrictive as striking workers can be forced to attend work or face the sack for not meeting minimum service levels.
Among the commitments made at the meeting on Saturday, unions agreed they will collectively refuse to tell their members to cross the picket lines, defying the demands of the legislation which has now passed through Parliament.
Sharon Graham, leader of the UK’s largest union Unite, said the Bill puts this government “at war with workers”, as she laid out how unions may have to act outside of the law to defy the legislation.
“One of us in this room will be first, they will be tested, we must act together,” stressed Graham. “We have to face facts, real solidarity to push this back may take us outside the law.”
“We must not allow them to force workers across their own picket lines, to break their own strikes, to defeat their own resolve.”
The meeting marked a significant start of a coordinated movement between trade unions to support each other and act in direct defiance to the new bill.
Union leaders including the Fire Brigade Union’s, Matt Wrack, and RMT’s Mick Lynch said workers could no longer rely on politicians. “Workers must defend themselves” said Wrack, as Lynch emphasised the only way to win was through solidarity.
One in five workers in Britain are at risk of losing their right to strike, while the TUC warned the government could use the bill as a ‘Trojan horse’ to push through further anti-union measures.
Sectors affected include health services; fire and rescue services; education services; transport services; decommissioning of nuclear installations and management of radioactive waste and spent fuel; and border security.
Even the government has admitted that the new law will worsen industrial disputes, with a government impact assessment into minimum service levels in the rail industry finding it would threaten safety and lead to more disputes.
This was backed up by a group of mayors and council leaders including Andy Burnham and Sadiq Khan, who joined together to blast the bill as they vowed to “explore every possible option” to avoid issuing work notices. The group of leaders said they would work with trade unions and employers to stop the legislation being used in their areas.
The special congress committed all unions to work together to adopt different tactical approaches of non-cooperation and non-compliance and support any worker who is subject to a work notice.
Trade unions wanted to send a clear message to politicians from all parties, that they will not stop fighting until the legislation is repealed.
Hannah Davenport is news reporter at Left Foot Forward, focusing on trade unions and environmental issues
The government has stolen the right to strike from millions of workers
8 December, 2023 The conscription of workers is an abuse of state power and the government is openly pursuing anti-worker policies.
In dystopian Britain, millions of workers have lost the right to strike. The right was acquired to counter employers exploiting workers. This helped to improve workers’ pay, working and living conditions and accelerate economic growth. Ever since the late 1970s, workers’ rights have been under attack and former Prime Minister Tony Blair once boasted that the UK has the “most restrictive laws on trade unions in the Western world”. The draconian Tory law
The draconian Strikes (Minimum Service Levels) Act 2023 marks a new phase. Despite lawful strike ballots millions of workers will be conscripted to work during a strike. This week, despite considerable opposition, the Tory government has enacted legislation specifying minimum service levels (MSLs) that striking workers must provide. The MSL for railways is 40% of the usual train timetable. For ambulance workers, it is around 80% of the staffing level. For border security services at airports, ports and elsewhere 75% of the staff must work during a strike. These requirements do not apply to UK nations with relevant devolved powers. Further MSLs will be issued for other sectors.
The MSLs are accompanied by a Code of Practice, specifying the “reasonable steps” (whatever that means) that trade union must take in ordering their members to cross picket lines and break strikes. The workers refusing to obey will be sacked without any redress and trade unions can be sued for damages by employers.
Millions of workers will not be able to take strike action. For example, in the case of trains, 40% of MSLs can’t be provided without signalling, ticketing, platform, cleaning, security and other staff. They have effectively lost their right to strike.
The mechanics of the law are that a Minister decides the MSLs needed during a strike and ask employers to comply. Employer must select the workers needed to comply with the order and send their names to the trade unions that organised the strike. The union must implement the work order.
To call a strike, a union must give a 14 day notice to the employer. However, the employer is only required to give trade unions 7 day notice to ensure that selected employees work, and has another four days to vary that list. This effectively leaves trade unions with just three calendar days to comply with the non-negotiable order.
From the mass of employee names supplied, a union must determine whether they are its members. It must then send emails (if it knows addresses) and/or first-class letters (will Royal Mail deliver in time?) to inform the members so listed. This could run into thousands. For example, recently 20,000 members of the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT) took strike action. The striking members selected by the employer must receive communication from the union before the strike action i.e. within three days (see above). The union must “encourage them to comply with the work notice”. Such letters no doubt would be carefully crafted by lawyers, at considerable expense to trade unions.
The selected union member “must carry out the work during the strike or could be subject to disciplinary proceedings which could include dismissal”. There is no automatic right of appeal for unfair dismissal or compensation.
Without any consultation the Act has changed the law on picketing. Trade unions may have to appoint “picketing supervisors”. As hundreds of railway stations could be picketed, this would mean appointing hundreds of picketing supervisors or other officials. Paragraph 33 of the Code of Practice says ”the picket supervisor (if present) or another union official or member to use reasonable endeavours to ensure that picketers avoid, so far as reasonably practicable, trying to persuade members who are identified on the work notice not to cross the picket line at times when they are required by the work notice to work.”
This is followed by paragraph 34 stating that: “Unions are not required to notify the picket supervisor of the names of union members identified in the work notice”.
The person selected by the work notice may wave the letter from the union to cross the picket line. The onus is on the union to find a solution.
Unions must not offer any inducements to members selected to work during a strike. If employers decide that trade unions have not taken “reasonable steps”, which is not fully defined, they can sue the union for damages. Inevitably, prolonged litigation will follow. Anti-worker policies
The conscription of workers is an abuse of state power and the government is openly pursuing anti-worker policies. It should be noted that there are no minimum service levels that water, gas, electricity, rail, banks, insurance and other companies, or government departments must provide to the people. The legislation empowers ministers to impose MSLs on trade unions and striking workers only.
International law, signed by the UK in 1948, requires dialogue between trade unions and employers to set the level of the minimum service. The UK Act, however, excludes dialogue between those parties in setting the level. The Minister alone sets MSLs. Historically, UK trade unions have voluntarily agreed minimum service levels (MSLs) with employers in key sectors, e.g. essential maintenance, but the government has chosen not to build upon that.
Unlike France, Italy, Spain and other European democracies the right of British workers to take strike action is not protected by constitutional or other means. In those countries, workers can’t be sacked for taking strike action. British workers denied the right to take industrial action will struggle to bring intransigent employers to the negotiating table, and their living standards will plummet which will then have knock-on effect on economic activity.
The legislation is underpinned by a threat of dismissal of workers and lawsuits against trade unions. But how will the government or employers find a readymade supply of train drivers, ambulance drivers, nurses and doctors?
Employers can even flout the law. Last year, P&O Ferries illegally sacked 800 workers. The then Prime Minister Boris Johnson said: “P&O plainly aren’t going to get away with it”. The government did not enforce the law.
The legislation does not specify any “reasonable steps” that employers must take to resolve industrial disputes. A macho employer could select more workers than is “reasonably necessary” for the purpose of providing minimum service levels, and humiliate unions to create conditions for lawsuits. The work notice may contain inaccurate information but unions cannot challenge employer’s specification of “reasonably necessary” number of workers needed. Trade unions with limited resources will not be in a position to challenge the might of global corporations, and those doing so face the likelihood of high legal costs and eventual bankruptcy which is perhaps the main aim of the Tory law.
No doubt, aggrieved workers will suspend co-operation with employers and refuse to work overtime or on rest days or out-of-hours, or take sick leave. This will sour industrial relations.
There is also a dilemma for employers. Suppose following Ministerial edicts they choose not to issue work notices. If so, they could leave themselves open to lawsuits by service users for failure to provide minimum service levels.
Prem Sikka is an Emeritus Professor of Accounting at the University of Essex and the University of Sheffield, a Labour member of the House of Lords, and Contributing Editor at Left Foot Forward.
The backdrop to Keir Starmer’s speech today (12 December) could not have been more illustrative. While the Labour leader spoke in Buckinghamshire castigating the Conservative Party for allowing internal skirmishes to override their responsibilities as a government, Tory MPs ferreted around Westminster, deciding whether to put Rishi Sunak’s leadership at risk by voting down his Rwanda bill in the Commons this evening.
While the Tory party splinters into four or five factions, Starmer’s decision to deliver a speech away from Westminster was a smart way of showing that Labour will govern in the national interest. Whereas the Tories cannot even manage their own party. They are making it easy for Starmer. “While they’re swanning around, self-importantly, with their factions and their star chambers, fighting like rats in a sack, there’s a country out here that isn’t being governed,” he said.
The Labour leader ran through the government’s failures, describing the Rwanda plan – which would send asylum seekers to the central African country – as the pinnacle of its incompetence. It is not only a “gimmick”, he said, but a waste of money that could instead be spent bolstering the border force. Wasteful government is a core Labour attack line but here Starmer made a broader point. “After the sex scandals, the expenses scandals, the waste scandals, the contracts for friends, even in a crisis like the pandemic, people now think politics is about naked self-enrichment.”
Beyond the attacks on the government, this was a statement of values meant to draw a contrast between the two main parties – one at ease breaking international law, and the other led by a former director of prosecutions who put “expense-cheat politicians in jail”. As prime minister, Starmer claimed, he would abide by the law and restore probity to public life – a bar set so low by the government’s own standards.
That partly explains why there are so few areas that Labour is not willing to go up against the Conservatives. If you thought Keir Starmer’s opposition to high immigration was a one-off sop to the right, then his speech today suggested the opposite. It showed that lower immigration will be central to Labour’s programme. Whether it delivers on that is another matter, but Starmer’s opposition to wage-reducing, condition-suppressing, business-driven immigration is becoming more trenchant.
That tonal shift began with his speech to the Confederation of Business Industry last year when he condemned Britain’s “immigration dependency”. Today, he made explicit the connection between high immigration and the Tories “driving down the terms and conditions of the British people”. And yes, Starmer confirmed, Brexit was a vote for “lower immigration”. But he thinks it was also a vote for higher wages, better public services and the restoration of communities.
The problems that pockmark the public realm demand, Starmer said, a “decade of national renewal”. The alacrity with which Starmer can survey the fractures in the public services has always been the reason that he, and not the leader of the party in power for 13 years, is the more plausible “change” candidate. The government’s actions today, and for a long time, have furnished Starmer’s speech writers with copious material.
Starmer’s speech was not a policy programme, but a statement of values. And with the Conservative Party’s civil war as his background, it was one of his most comprehensive yet.
Asylum seeker dies on UK barge housing migrants and refugees
British Interior Minister James Cleverly says the death will be investigated.
The Bibby Stockholm barge at Portland, near Poole, UK, on August 7
[File: Toby Melville/Reuters]
Published On 12 Dec 2023
An asylum seeker has died on board a UK barge used to house people while their asylum claims are adjudicated.
British Interior Minister James Cleverly told parliament on Tuesday that an asylum seeker died on the Bibby Stockholm barge moored in Portland, Dorset.
“Tragically, there has been death on the Bibby Stockholm barge,” Cleverly said. “At this stage, I’m uncomfortable getting into any more details, but we will, of course, investigate fully.”
The barge has been controversial since it was first put into use, along with old military barracks, to hold asylum seekers. Earlier this year, the barge, which can house about 500 people, had to be temporarily evacuated after the discovery of legionella bacteria in its water supply, which can cause serious illness.
Government officials have said that the barge is not a detention facility and that those held there are able to take short trips to a nearby town.
The Guardian newspaper recently reported that, in practice, doing so is difficult. The outlet quoted a man held on the barge who described poor conditions, abusive behaviour from authorities, and “exactly the feeling of being in a prison”.
“We are treated in such a way that we despair and wish for death” the man is quoted as saying.
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Authorities have released few details about the death on the barge. A Dorset Police spokesperson said that the agency received “a report of a sudden death of a resident on the Bibby Stockholm”. Advertisement
The Refugee Council called for an independent review.
“This is an appalling loss of life but tragically not surprising,” said Enver Solomon, the group’s chief executive. “Nobody who comes to our country seeking asylum should be left without the support they need yet the system has more hostility than compassion built into it.” SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES
See ‘unusual’ and ‘unique’ treasures found in woman’s 1,300-year-old grave in England
MOIRA RITTER December 12, 2023
More than 1,300 years ago, a young woman was buried in England — along with various medieval treasures. Now, a year after discovering the ancient grave, experts have unearthed another “unique” artifact from the site.
Archaeologists discovered an “extremely delicate, large silver and gold cross backed with wood,” according to a Dec. 12 news release from the Museum of London Archaeology. The cross was described as an “unusual item,” and it was found in a grave dating between 630 and 670 A.D.
The cross was first identified with an X-ray image, experts said. Then, archaeologists conducted micro-excavations by removing “whole blocks of soil” from the site before examining them in a controlled lab.
Experts “micro-excavated” a square of soil to discover the cross, officials said.
Lab excavations revealed the artifact, which is a central cross “decorated with a smaller gold cross,” according to officials. It has five garnets, one large and four smaller, and at the end of each arm is a small circular silver cross with garnet and gold at the center.
Experts said the cross resembles other crosses found in “high status female burials” from around the same time, indicating that the woman in the grave could have “held a very special position within the Christian community.”
The cross has one large garnet and four smaller garnets, experts said.
The cross is attached to wood, which is heavily corroded, archaeologists said. The team is hopeful that it can identify the type of wood.
When the grave — which experts described as “one of the most significant early-medieval female burials ever uncovered in Britain” — was first discovered in April 2022, archaeologists unearthed approximately 30 pendants and beads that once were part of a necklace.
Updated photos show the “exquisite” gold and gemstone necklace after it was cleaned.
A sid-by-side comparison shows the necklace after cleaning.
“Seeing the central gold and garnet clasp cleaned up is breath-taking,” Simon Mortimer, an archaeology consultant, said in the museum’s news release. “The key is now to reassemble all of the evidence that was buried on that day with this lady – to understand the full significance of who she was, where she was from and how she came to be here and why. Those answers will rewrite our understanding of early Medieval Northamptonshire.”
The necklace is approximately 1,300 years old, according to experts.
Archaeologists said they are working to determine if coins from the necklace were Roman coins or imitations.
Archaeologists are now working to determine whether the coins on the necklace were original Roman coins or if they were imitations made as part of the necklace, they said.
The original excavation also revealed several teeth fragments, but officials said further investigations at the site have uncovered more bones, which will give more insight into the deceased.
Since last year, osteologists have discovered “the upper part of a femur, part of the pelvic bone, some vertebrae and part of a hand and wrist,” the museum said. The bones were preserved because they were covered by a “crushed copper dish placed within the grave.”
Early analysis of the skeletal remains indicate that the deceased was likely a young woman, but further tests will be conducted to determine more details, according to experts.
Harpole is in Northamptonshire, which is approximately 70 mile northwest of London.
A subdiscipline of anatomy, anthropology, and paleontology, osteology is the detailed study of the structure of bones, skeletal elements, teeth, microbone ...
Human osteology is the science that deals with human skeleton recovery and interpretation. Osteological work is often aimed at the identification of the ...
U$A Lawmakers: Coast Guard academy sex assaults threaten national security
One witness, Caitlin Maro, dropped out of the Coast Guard Academy in 2005 after multiple instances of sexual assault.
USCG photo by SANTOS, DAVID M. PA1
Reports of a Coast Guard sexual assault cover up that came to light in June threatens national security, lawmakers and whistleblowers said during a Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee inquiry into the issue on Tuesday.
The whistleblowers — both current and former members of the Coast Guard — testified before lawmakers about the alleged four-year-old cover up of a report known within the service as “Operation Fouled Anchor.” The report detailed years of sexual assault and inaction at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy from the late 1980s to 2006, alleging instances of sexual misconduct by at least 43 academy staff.
The panel of former and current servicewomen — who served across numerous decades — told lawmakers Tuesday about their experiences dealing with sexual assault and harassment at the Coast Guard Academy and after leaving the institution.
One witness, Caitlin Maro, testified that she dropped out of the academy in 2005 after multiple instances of sexual assault. Her assailant, she said, had groped her on numerous instances, at times in front of dozens of witnesses.
Another Coastie, retired Lt. Melissa McCafferty, had taken a trip to New York City with an older cadet. After making clear they’d have two hotel rooms, McCafferty went with the cadet, but there was only one room. Over three days, McCafferty said the older cadet repeatedly raped her. She did not report the instance out of fear of retaliation, eventually attempting to end her life in 2017.
“It is an abject failure of integrity that senior leaders have concealed, condoned and otherwise enabled this behavior to thrive,” McCafferty told lawmakers. “It is an abject failure of leadership that they have refused to address the systemic nature of this abuse.”
Failing to address such issues threatens the service’s readiness and retention, one panelist warned.
“The people drive the ships, the people rescue the other people, the people fire the weapons,” said retired Air Force Col. Lorry Fenner, who leads the government affairs division of the non-profit Service Women’s Action Network advocacy group. “If you don’t take care of your people and their families, then you have this recruiting problem, this retention problem, this readiness problem.”
In July, Coast Guard Commandant Adm. Linda Fagan — who assumed the role in June 2022 — ordered a 90-day accountability and transparency review of the service’s sexual assault and harassment policies.
Released on Dec. 6, some of Fagan’s recommendations include creating a prevention program modeled after the Defense Department and increasing oversight of the Coast Guard Academy. Fagan, who is the first woman to lead a branch of the U.S. military, told lawmakers this past July that senior Coast Guard leaders need to begin to rebuild trust within the service.
“I am the commandant now, and I am committed to that not happening again,” Fagan told lawmakers in the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee this summer. “It is clear to me that we’ve got a culture in areas that is permissive and allows sexual assaults, harassment, bullying, retaliation, that is inconsistent with our core values.”
About Zamone Perez Zamone “Z” Perez is a rapid response reporter and podcast producer at Defense News and Military Times. He previously worked at Foreign Policy and Ufahamu Africa. He is a graduate of Northwestern University, where he researched international ethics and atrocity prevention in his thesis. He can be found on Twitter @zamoneperez.
Turkish referee attack leaves crisis that goes beyond football
12th December 2023 By Victoria CraigIn Ankara
One of Turkey's top football officials may quit the game after he was physically attacked on the pitch by the president of an Ankara club and its fans.
The violent attack on elite referee Halil Umut Meler has left Turkish football in a full-blown crisis and magnified concerns about Turkey's institutions.
The referee was treated in hospital after he was punched in the face by MKE Ankaragucu president Faruk Koca, after the Ankara-based team conceded a late equaliser in the Turkish capital against Super Lig rivals Caykur Rizespor.
While the referee lay injured, furious fans then stormed on to the pitch and kicked him. Ankaragucu's club president has since resigned and been placed in pre-trial detention with two others.
The dramatic events after the final whistle underscore the intense emotions surrounding football in Turkey. The sport is massively popular in the country of 85 million people and is a platform that links Turkish politics, business and culture.
The attack has prompted the 37-year old referee on Uefa's elite list to contemplate quitting, according to Ali Kunak, former general secretary of the Turkish Football Federation's central arbitration board, who spoke to Meler and local media on Tuesday.
The violence has also led to an indefinite suspension of Turkish Super Lig games.
The Turkish Football Federation, in a post on X, said it condemned the "inhumane, despicable attack", which it blamed in part on "irresponsible statements of club presidents, managers, coaches, and TV commentators targeting referees".
Violence has long been associated with Turkish football, where it is common to see a heavy police presence at matches across the country.
In March, six people were arrested for clashes involving fireworks before and after a match between Bursa's Bursaspor and Diyarbakir's Amedspor. And last September, a fan burst on to the pitch and violently kicked a Besiktas player following a match against Ankaragucu.
"Football is not only football," said Ozgehan Senuva, professor of international relations at Ankara's Middle East Technical University. "This is only a reflection of the general social situation in Turkey." ReutersTurkey's Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya visited referee Halil Umut Meler in hospital on Tuesday
Many Turks and the country's Western allies worry about President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's tightening grip on Turkey's key institutions, including the judicial system. More than 20 years of Erdogan rule has left a deepening mistrust and sense of injustice that goes way beyond football.
The vast bulk of Turkey's media is controlled by the Erdogan government - 90%, according to Reporters Without Borders - but football has turned into a key venue for political discourse.
"People don't trust the referees and how the referees are appointed. That goes in parallel with the low levels of trust in the judicial system," said Prof Senuva.
But the violence shown towards Halil Umut Meler "is a new threshold for Turkish football", according to Omer Turan, an international relations professor at Istanbul's Bilgi University. "Referees are almost always the scapegoat used to explain unsuccessful results," he said.
Prof Turan pointed out that Faruk Koca, 59, is a former Ankara MP and a current member of President Erdogan's ruling Justice and Development party (AKP).
"[Faruk Koca] thought that being an AKP member would give him immunity. This proved to be a miscalculation," he said.
There was a swift reaction to Monday night's attack from Turkey's president, his AKP, and the justice department.
President Erdogan posted on X: "Sports means peace and brotherhood… We will never allow violence to take place in Turkish sports."
Faruk Koca initially complained to Turkish media that the incident had "developed due to the referee's wrong decisions and provocative behaviour".
However, he said later in a statement on the club website he was deeply saddened that "the club I manage, the football community, and our country are remembered with such an event and image".
He also apologised to the referee, his family and the wider Turkish nation for his attitude.
The justice ministry is investigating the issue and the AKP's disciplinary board is considering a request from the party for Mr Koca's expulsion.
But Turkey's judiciary has long been criticised for its lack of independence and Prof Senuva says the general mood, especially on social media, is that Faruk Koca's connections may ease his path through the courts.
"This is who he is. And this is the culture of [his] club as well. They are proud of being tough guys: it's part of the club's DNA."
In the lead up to the concluding session of the Ad Hoc Committee negotiating an international convention on cybercrime, ARTICLE 19 remains gravely concerned about the continued incompatibility of the draft text of the Convention with international standards on freedom of expression. We regret that the Ad Hoc Committee has done close to nothing to meaningfully address the plethora of our concerns, as well as the concerns raised by numerous States and stakeholders during the most recent session. The key problems of the draft text include fundamental vagueness on the scope of the Convention, numerous content-based offences, and underlying conflict of the Convention’s plain text with human rights standards. We urge the states not to conclude this Convention and make sure the draft is comprehensively revised.
ARTICLE 19 has closely monitored the drafting process of the proposed Comprehensive International Convention on Countering the Use of Information and Communications Technologies for Criminal Purposes (the Convention). We provided legal analysis on several drafts, most recently the joint analysis with Human Rights Watch on the Consolidated Draft used as the basis for the negotiations of the Sixth Session in New York in August 2023. In anticipation of the Ad Hoc Committee’s final session, to take place from 29 January to 9 February 2024 in New York, a new Draft Text has been released.
ARTICLE 19’s key concern with the recent draft include the following issues. We also note that this comment does not seek to provide an in-depth legal analysis on every provision, many of which are simply repeated from the prior Consolidated Draft, or are currently undergoing ongoing informal negotiations.
The Draft Text takes a step backward from basic human rights protections
Article 5 of the prior draft required States to ensure that implementation of the Convention is “in accordance” with their international human rights obligations. ARTICLE 19 is concerned that the current draft only requires that implementation is “consistent with” rights obligations. This softened language is significant, as it no longer requires compliance with human rights norms. Further, the Preamble of the Convention still fails to mention international human rights standards as the framework for the whole Convention. Moreover, paragraph 3 of the Preamble still includes cyber-enabled offences “related to terrorism, trafficking in persons, smuggling of migrants, illicit manufacturing of and trafficking in firearms,” which, as highlighted in more detail below, in our view have no place in this treaty. For instance, the reference to terrorism alone is particularly concerning, as there is no universally agreed upon definition of terrorism under international law.
Additionally, Article 21, which provides for parameters of prosecution, adjudication, and due process, only applies to offences established “in accordance” with the Convention., meaning its scope beyond the offences explicitly named is unclear. It also only requires that due process protections are “consistent with” international human rights obligations. This makes no mention of the presumption of innocence or principles of legality, strict necessity and proportionality. Finally, Article 24 of the current draft, which provides for conditions and safeguards, only applies to the procedural measures adopted under Chapter IV rather than the whole Convention. It fails to incorporate the principles of necessity and legality and the need for prior judicial authorization.
The Draft Text retains all its numerous contentious content-based offences
ARTICLE 19 has criticized the previous draft text for containing unnecessary content-related that may infringe freedom of expression online. Several of these offences were subject to considerable debate in the Sixth Session as they criminalize conduct never before seen in an international treaty. Some of these offences are cyber-enabled rather than cyber-dependent, meaning they do not even clearly fall under the scope of a cybercrime treaty. ARTICLE 19 recalls that criminal laws prohibiting dissemination of content are, by definition, restriction on freedom of expression, and therefore must be analyzed according to the tripartite test of restrictions enumerated under Article 19(3) of the ICCPR. The provisions in question under the Draft Text include:
The Draft Convention infringes on the rights of survivors of online gender-based violence (Article 15): While the trend of non-consensual sharing of images is problematic, addressing it in an international criminal instrument raises serious and complex issues in balancing freedom of expression and privacy rights, and is likely to backfire against the very vulnerable groups the provision is purported to protect. Article 15 does not appropriately mitigate the risk of criminalizing survivors particularly where the perpetrator is an authority figure, nor does it center the lack of freely given consent, or exempt conduct that is a matter of public interest or for a legitimate purpose related to the administration of justice.
The Draft Convention unduly restricts the rights of children and risks banning books (Articles 13 and 14). As drafted, Articles 13 and 14, which purport to curb the dissemination of child exploitation materials, go well beyond international standards on the matter and risk infringing on children’s rights and criminalizing content that may have scientific, educational, artistic, or literary value. Particularly in states where gender expression is repressed, these articles may also restrict the legitimate experience and expression of gender and sexuality of children, including adolescents. Finally, Article 13 is written so broadly that it would appear to ban books including classic works of fiction taught in universities; indeed, Article 13(2)(b) defines “material” to include not only “images” but also “written material.” ARTICLE 19 recalls that informal report covering these articles, following the recent Sixth Session, reveals little consensus as to basic definitions and scope, noting a number of key provisions where “attempts to reduce the gap [between States] did not yield any fruit” and several where “delegations could not agree.”
The underlying scope of the Draft Convention remains unclear
The Draft Convention continues to lack a coherent articulation of what does or does not constitute a cybercrime, which is astonishing this late into the drafting process. From the Sixth Session, an informal meeting was convened to present two proposals on the Convention’s scope. As a result of the meeting, the co-chairs of the working group noted that States disagreed on “several live issues,” including whether Article 17 served as “morphing it into a general crimes convention” or whether it “would apply to the full suit of procedural powers and international cooperation.” The proposed solutions, nonetheless, both adopt an expansive scope in contravention of the numerous States that have taken pause at the ambiguous scope and the obligations it would impose on them.
The first proposal is to merge Article 17 into Article 35 within the section on procedural measures, which would explicitly apply procedural powers to any new offences passed in accordance with the Convention that carry “a penalty of three years or more.”
The second proposal seeks to require the criminalization of any offence under a United Nations convention or protocol.
We note that both these proposals are significantly problematic and do little to nothing to mitigate the underlying problem with Article 17. Allowing procedural powers to flow merely from the severity of penalty has no basis in the actual substance of an offence, and rewards expansive police, surveillance, and extradition powers to States that merely impose disproportionate penalties. Additionally, United Nations conventions include a number of obligations and frameworks, such as that surrounding hate speech, which would be undermined or lead to conflicts if suddenly required to be bluntly criminalized. In this respect, the purported ‘limitation’ to United Nations instruments is tone-deaf to the practical complexities of such instruments, threatening to undermine them and create unnecessary confusion. The full implications of Article 17 and these proposals still cannot be understood because as currently drafted, it could also apply to future treaties including where those future treaties deliberately avoid applying their provisions to online environments.
The Draft Convention is unresponsive to fundamental concerns regarding its broad cross-border surveillance and police powers
The bulk of the Convention’s proposed provisions allow for expansive and highly intrusive sharing of personal data, which among other fatal problems, threatens to chill the use of tools that promote freedom of expression online. For instance, the Draft Text in Article 40 still authorizes proactive information disclosures without any consideration for the safeguards of sending or recipient states. Article 47 continues to contemplate generalized information sharing beyond the scope of particularized investigations. These are not constrained by any explicit data protection safeguards. Provisions such as these, and others which ARTICLE 19 has previously analyzed, are more problematic given the aforementioned lack of human rights or due process safeguards, including prior judicial authorization requirements.
ARTICLE 19 finds it astonishing that after several years and several drafting sessions, such fundamental issues with the Convention remain. ARTICLE 19 urges States to reconsider the necessity of rushing an inherently flawed and overbroad instrument this late in the process. We will continue to work closely with partners in civil society and relevant stakeholders as we follow the outputs of the negotiations and drafting process.
Reflecting On The Evolution Of Cybersecurity In 2023
Emil Sayegh Contributor CEO of Ntirety. Cover all things cloud, cybersecurity & tech. Dec 12, 2023
2023 marked a transformative journey for the cybersecurity, IT, and cloud industries.
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2023 marked a transformative journey for the cybersecurity, IT, and cloud industries. Reflecting on the past, it’s clear these sectors experienced substantial shifts in focus, witnessed notable service upgrades, and confronted persistent challenges along with transformative changes. Amidst the continuous evolution aimed at countering emerging threats, it’s crucial to ponder the key takeaways from the year—many of which we extensively discussed in articles published throughout 2023.
1. Cybersecurity Amidst Geopolitical Turmoil: Impact of the Russia-Ukraine Conflict
The geopolitical upheaval stemming from the Russia-Ukraine war cast a profound shadow over cybersecurity landscapes in 2023. The conflict triggered an escalation in state-sponsored cyberattacks, with both nations engaging in digital offensives. The intensification of cyber espionage, disinformation campaigns, and ransomware attacks highlighted the interconnectedness of geopolitics and cybersecurity. As the conflict unfolded, organizations worldwide faced the challenge of safeguarding their digital assets amid heightened global tensions. The year served as a stark reminder that geopolitical events can have far-reaching implications, necessitating a vigilant and adaptive cybersecurity approach in an ever-changing digital world.
2. Meta-Disappointment
The much-hyped metaverse faced a disappointing trajectory, with even tech giant Facebook rebranding itself to align with the futuristic concept. Economic downturns and a lack of forethinking about privacy and security implications took a toll on the metaverse's momentum, affecting associated technologies like NFTs. Despite these setbacks it’s possible the allure of the metaverse might resurface, but for now the spotlight has shifted to the burgeoning realm of Artificial Intelligence (AI).
3. White House National Cybersecurity Strategy Implementation Plan
4. Cybersecurity and Cloud Interdependence: A Growing Nexus
Throughout 2023, cybersecurity and cloud technologies became increasingly intertwined, revealing a growing relationship of interdependence. The reliance on cloud services surged, amplifying both the opportunities and risks for digital security. The year highlighted the need for a harmonized cybersecurity strategy that addresses the evolving landscape of cloud-based threats. As organizations continued to migrate to the cloud, the intricate dance between safeguarding data and leveraging cloud efficiencies underscored the imperative of an integrated and holistic cybersecurity approach.
5. Cybersecurity Compliance with SEC
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission revamped its rules on cyber risk management, governance, and incident disclosure, effective December 2023. This regulatory update reflects the growing centrality of cybersecurity in corporate compliance.
6. Multimedia Content Security
As cyberattacks increasingly target data-intensive content and particularly streaming services, companies like Amazon's Prime Video have prioritized robust security measures. Protection now extends to every facet of content delivery, guarding against threats like external tampering during live events.
7. Emerging Cybersecurity Trends
The cybersecurity landscape shifted towards new frontiers, with a focus on zero trust, AI, and cloud technologies. Global cyberattacks spiked by 40 to 45%, necessitating reliance on these emerging security and cloud technologies to address the evolving threat landscape.
8. Role of Automation and Service Partners
Amid rising cyber threats and constrained budgets, the significance of automation and partnerships with cybersecurity service providers became evident as Enterprise SOCs started to reach their limitations. These partners expedite secure and complaint cloud adoption, seamlessly integrate security measures, and help streamline challenges associated with cloud migration.
9. AI in Cybersecurity
The unexpected surge in practical AI brought both opportunities and cybersecurity challenges to the forefront. A vigilant and strategic approach is crucial in harnessing AI's potential, emphasizing targeted applications to address specific vulnerabilities and challenges within the technology infrastructure.
10. Quantum Computing Challenges and Opportunities
The emergence of quantum computing posed both challenges and opportunities for cybersecurity in 2023. While the potential for unprecedented computational power promises breakthroughs in encryption, it also raises concerns about the vulnerability of existing cryptographic methods. As organizations grapple with quantum-resistant security solutions, the landscape of digital defenses may be poised for a paradigm shift.
11. Cybersecurity Funding Surge
Throughout the year confidence in the cybersecurity sector soared, manifesting in substantial investments across various companies. The third quarter witnessed a remarkable surge in funding, underlining the industry's significance in current and future digital endeavors.
12. Crypto Turmoil: 2023 Crashes and Hacks
Cryptocurrency faced significant turmoil this year, and 2023 was marked by crashes and high-profile hacks that underscored the vulnerabilities that exist within the crypto landscape. The surge in crypto adoption revealed challenges, with notable instances of cybercrimes targeting digital assets. Simultaneously, these incidents prompted a critical examination of the security infrastructure surrounding cryptocurrencies. As the crypto ecosystem navigated crashes and security breaches, the industry grappled with the imperative of fortifying against evolving cyber threats. This tumultuous year underscored the importance of robust cybersecurity frameworks in the ever-changing realm of digital currencies.
2023 in Reflection
The multifaceted challenges and opportunities encountered in 2023 further highlight the complex and ever-evolving nature of cybersecurity, cloud, and IT. As we navigate these uncharted territories, adapting to quantum advancements, cloud interdependence, geopolitical shifts, and environmental imperatives will be pivotal in fortifying our digital future.
Emil Sayegh is the President and CEO of Ntirety, a global leader in Comprehensive Compliant Cybersecurity Services.
Emil is an early pioneer of the Cloud, having launched and led successful Cloud computing businesses for Rackspace, HP, and Codero. Recognized as one of the “fathers” of Open Stack, Emil also led the merger between Hostway Inc. and Hosting Inc. to form Ntirety, which manages IT Security for organizations across the Fortune 500. Ntirety is the only company that embeds compliant security throughout an organization’s IT systems and culture.
Emil has spent more than 25 years in the IT industry developing, marketing, and growing businesses for Dell, Rackspace, HP/Compaq, RLX Technologies, Codero, Hostway, and now Ntirety. He holds nine patents.
The cybersecurity community has spent 2023 battling against ever-more sophisticated threat actors and adversary techniques.
There has been a wide range of major cybersecurity incidents in 2023, from nation-state espionage campaigns to attackers gaining a gateway to thousands of enterprises through software supply chain vulnerability exploitations.
These have had significant real-world impacts, such as victim organizations experiencing loss of service and crippling financial costs, while many millions of individuals have had highly sensitive data stolen, putting them at risk of follow-on attacks.
In this article, Infosecurity Magazine has set out the top 10 cyber-attacks of 2023, which have been decided based on factors like the scale of the incident and its longer-term implications. These have been listed in order of the dates the attacks were first reported.
1. Royal Mail Faces Huge Financial Loss Following LockBit Attack
In January 2023, it emerged that the UK’s postal service the Royal Mail was hit by a ransomware attack which resulted in a temporary halt to international deliveries. Data was also stolen by the attackers. The Royal Mail refused the pay the £65.7m ($79.85m) demand from the LockBit group to return the stolen data. However, the service revealed it had experienced huge financial costs as a result of the attack, including large revenue losses and the company is said to have spent £10m on ransomware remediation.
2. Enormous Data Breach at T-Mobile
International telecoms giant T-Mobile admitted that 37 million customers had their personal and account information accessed by a malicious actor via an API attack that began on November 25, 2022. The incident was not discovered until January 5, 2023. In a separate incident, T-Mobile USA notified customers of another breach of personal and account data that occurred in February and March 2023. The breaches mean many millions of customers are vulnerable to follow-on fraud attempts.
3. City of Oakland Declares State of Emergency After Ransomware Attack
In February 2023, the administration of the City of Oakland, California, declared a state of emergency as a result of a ransomware attack. The incident shut down many non-emergency services, while government buildings were forced to close temporarily. It was later reported that the hackers stole a decade’s worth of sensitive data from city servers in the attack, including information about employees in sensitive roles such as the police.
4.MOVEit File Transfer Exploitation
The exploitation of a zero-day vulnerability in the popular file transfer software MOVEit is thought to have impacted thousands of organizations, ranging from media to healthcare. The flaw was first exploited by the notorious Clop ransomware gang in May 2023. Clop continued to successfully compromise end users despite a patch being released on May 27. The group’s continued exploitation of the vulnerability is believed to have driven a record number of ransomware attacks in July 2023.
5. Chinese Espionage Campaign Infiltrates US Government
Microsoft discovered a Chinese cyber-espionage campaign that enabled the Storm-0558 group to gain access to customer email accounts from May 15, 2023. This included employees in the US State and Commerce Departments and other US government agencies. To launch the campaign, the attackers compromised a Microsoft engineer’s corporate account, leading to the tech giant being criticised and even accused of negligence by a US lawmaker.
6. UK Electoral Commission Attack Exposes 40 Million Voters’ Data
In August 2023, the UK’s Electoral Commission revealed it had been the victim of a “complex cyber-attack” exposing the personal data of anyone in the UK who was registered to vote between 2014 and 2022. Worryingly, the attackers had remained undetected in the systems for 15 months, suggesting they were in search of something beyond quick financial gain. It was later reported that the Electoral Commission had received an automatic failure during a Cyber Essentials audit.
7.Casinos Taken Down by Cyber-Attacks
In September 2023, hotels and casinos giant MGM Resorts International reported that it had experienced a cyber-incident affecting critical parts of its business for several hours. The attack, perpetrated by the ALPHV/BlackCat ransomware gang, cost the firm more than $100m after refusing to pay the ransom demand. Just days after the MGM incident, another Las Vegas based casino and hotel chain company, Caesars Entertainment, revealed it had also been compromised by ransomware threat actors.
8. Logistics Firm Closes Due to Ransomware Attack
One of the UK’s largest privately owned logistics firms, KNP Logistics Group, was forced into administration in September 2023 following a ransomware attack it suffered earlier in the year. The firm will be forced to make over 700 employees redundant, with the business stating that it has been unable to secure urgent investment due to the attack. The incident highlights the serious real-world impact that cyber-extortion attacks can have.
9. 23andMe Suffers Major Data Breach
A DNA testing firm 23andMe confirmed its customers had their profile information accessed by threat actors following a credential stuffing campaign in October 2023. The threat actor claimed to have 20 million 23andMe data records in their possession, raising concerns that highly sensitive data, such as ethnicity, could be used against victims. 23andMe later confirmed that over 6 million individuals' information was accessed from the data breach, and revealed the hackers were able to access a significant number of files containing information about users' ancestry.
One of the world’s largest and most renowned libraries, the British Library, was hit by a ransomware attack that took down online and onsite services. The library revealed the attack occurred on October 28, later confirming that internal HR data was stolen and leaked and that user data was hacked and offered for sale on the dark web. The Rhysida ransomware group have claimed responsibility for the attack.