Cleric’s Murder Gives Impetus to Calls for Military Control over Internet
MAY 10,
2019
Authorities’ Focus on Political Activists
while Violent Individuals Go Unnoticed on Social Media
Following the killing
of Mostafa Ghasemi, a cleric in
the city of Hamedan, by an individual who had displayed his violent intentions
on his Instagram account, Iran’s security and military establishments have
expressed support for Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s demand to impose greater
restrictions on the Internet and tighter controls over social media in particular.
Since Nasrollah Pejmanfar,
a hard-line conservative member of Parliament, and fellow lawmaker Rouhollah
Momen-Nasab, one of the strongest proponents of Internet censorship, proposed
the “Managing Social Messengers Bill” to the
Parliamentary Committee on Cultural Affairs in November 2018, there has been
increasing efforts to hand over control of the Internet to Iran’s military.
The killing of Ghasemi has
given those efforts greater impetus.
Ghasemi was gunned down in
front of a seminary school in Hamedan on April 27, 2019, by Behrouz Hajilooie,
who took responsibility for the attack and posted photos of himself with
various kinds of guns on Instagram.
Authorities Call for Greater
Monitoring of Social Media
According to the BBC Persian
Service, Hajilooie had previously talked about carrying out
assassinations in his messages on Instagram. He
was killed by police in a shootout on April 28.
The same day, Khamenei said in
a speech to a group of police chiefs that they should pay closer attention to
monitoring content on social media.
“Today cyberspace has
widely entered into people’s lives. Despite benefits and interests, it also
poses great dangers,” Iran’s leader said.
He added: “The killer of
the Hamedani cleric published photos of himself on Instagram carrying four
different kinds of guns. Dealing with these matters is the responsibility of
the police.”
Reacting to the Iranian
leader’s green light for greater control of the Internet, Police Chief General Hossein
Ashtari told a conference of police officers on April 29:
“Cyberspace has become a platform for the spread of atheism and corruption and
in our belief it should be managed.”
Ashtari continued:
“Unfortunately we are witnessing growing incidents of crime in cyberspace and,
in accordance with our duties; we have issued necessary warnings to relevant
authorities.”
“I believe the police have
been successful whenever they took well-planned actions in advance and stepped
in with access to intelligence. We must therefore expand these strategies,” he
added.
Also on April 30, Gen.
Bakhshali Kamrani Saleh, the police chief in Hamedan Province, announced the
arrest of 32 people who allegedly posted comments in support of Hajiloooie on
his Instagram page and added: “several individuals have been identified in
Mashhad.”
Authorities Monitor Online
Activities of Peaceful Activists, But Not Violent Criminals
The statements by senior
police officials have raised concern about the possibility of greater restrictions
on social media in the name of fighting crime.
“The guy had 50,000
followers and posted photos with guns and today he killed a mullah in Hamedan.
There’s no indication he was ever summoned or convicted. On the other hand, I
was sentenced to three months in prison for posting a few critical comments on
my page that had 200 followers …” tweeted political activist Siavash
Rezaeian.
“I’m a simple activist. Am I under greater
surveillance than a killer with a lot of followers?” he added.
Journalist Jila
Baniyaghoob wrote on Twitter: “The FATA cyber police force and
certain other agencies were busy monitoring Siavash Rezaeian’s posts and
detaining (former secretary of the Defenders of Human Rights Center) Jinous
Sobhani over a few strands of hair. They had no time to look at photos of an
armed man who openly talked about his assassination plans. If they had spent
the time, perhaps the killer and his victim would have been alive right now.”
Passive Defense Organization:
Social Media “Incites the People,” Should be Controlled
Meanwhile, on April 28,
Gholamreza Jalali, IRGC member and head of the Passive Defense Organization (PDO),
which has four divisions responsible for dealing with biological, chemical,
radiological and cyberattacks, called for greater control over social media.
“The control of social
media networks is a necessity that requires attention,” Jalali said, adding,
“In times of crisis, social media networks incite the people against the
government and put pressure on the country’s administration. That needs to be
controlled.”
On January 21, 2019, the
organization had planned to shut off the country’s Internet for two hours supposedly to
test the ability of Iranian online banking systems to resist a cyberattack.
Although the test was scrapped after widespread opposition by Iranians on
social media, it showed the military’s determination to gain access and control
Iran’s Internet infrastructure.
Former IRGC member Takes Lead
of Key Organization Fighting “Soft War” on Internet
Another step taken to
enhance the military’s control over the Internet was Khamenei’s appointment of the former
commander-in-chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), Mohammad
Ali Jafari, to head the IRGC’s Baghiyatollah Cultural and Social Headquarters
(BCSH) in April 2019.
The BCSH’s significance
stems from its cyber operations. Their role is to help the country address the
so-called “soft war” that the West is allegedly waging against Iran on the
internet. The fact that its head was directly appointed by Khamenei for the
first time is an indication of the importance Iran’s ruling establishment attaches
to the “soft war” on the Internet, a topic frequently addressed by Jafari.
“Given your interest in
being present in cultural fields and having a role in the soft war… I appoint
you to head the BCSH,” Iran’s supreme leader said in his order.
Comments made by
high-level officials, appointments to top positions, and actions taken by
legislative and executive branches are all signs that the ruling establishment
is moving toward imposing tighter restrictions on online activities. Expanding
the role of the military and the IRGC in cyber affairs has alarmed defenders of
Internet freedom and human rights organizations.
The primary concern is
that elected bodies have no oversight of the IRGC, perpetuating the lack of
transparency and opening the door to further violations of the law and people’s
rights by the IRGC.
During his tenure as
commander of the IRGC (2007-2019), Jafari expanded cyber operations focused on
the “soft war,” which in December 2016 he described as
a the “greatest threat” to the Islamic Republic.
In 2007, Jafari’s first
year as commander, the IRGC established the Center for Investigation of
Organized Crime, which in 2015 was upgraded to the Cyber Defense Headquarters (CDH).
Gerdab is believed to be the
CDH’s official website and it has played a role in suppressing online political
and civil dissent, especially following the popular upheavals in 2009. The organization
has also carried out several operations to identify and arrest people involved in
“indecent” activities such as women’s fashion, female modeling and studio
photography.
The operations have put
the FATA cyber police force in
charge of dealing with online criminal activity.
Jafari’s statements
indicate the centrality with which he views this “soft war.” “A lot of
people think that the eight-year Holy Defense [Iran-Iraq war] ended [in 1988]
but it’s a very important strategic mistake to believe that the war with our
enemies is only in the physical realm,” Jafari said to
a group of IRGC defense experts on July 24, 2010.
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