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Corporate Social Responsibility
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5.25.2006 ET
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Amnesty International USA Challenges Yahoo Management at Annual Meeting
Calls on Company to Demand Release of Internet Dissidents and End Their Involvement in Censorship in China
(CSRwire) (Santa Clara, California) - Today at Yahoo's (NYSE: YHOO) annual
stockholder meeting, Amnesty International USA (AIUSA), an activist
shareholder of Yahoo's stock, will challenge the company to uphold human
rights in its operations in China. AIUSA will call on the company to
publicly demand the release of internet dissidents jailed in China for
peacefully exercising their freedom of expression rights. Tens of
thousands of AI members have already written to Yahoo's CEO, calling on
the company to push for the release of Shi Tao, a Chinese journalist now
serving ten years in prison for sending politically sensitive information
in an e-mail using a Yahoo account. Yahoo also provided information to the
Chinese government that could have contributed to the conviction of Li Zhi,
a civil servant who was jailed for eight years in 2003 after posting
comments that criticized government corruption.
During Yahoo's stockholder meeting on May 25, Anthony Cruz, AIUSA's
Corporate Action Network Coordinator for California, will address Yahoo's
stockholders, asking management to go on the record calling for the
release of Shi and Li. In addition, Cruz will raise concerns about the
company's long-time willingness to operate behind the "Great Firewall" of
China, agreeing to actively restrict users by blocking content on topics
such as human rights, political reform, Tiananmen Square and Falun Gong,
among others.
"Yahoo is partnering with one of the world's most repressive regimes to
keep people from getting information and from writing freely in e-mails
and on Web sites. Internet censorship threatens the very foundation on
which the Internet was built. This doesn't seem like a good business model
for a company that needs more free speech online to grow," said Cruz.
Leading US internet companies, including Microsoft (MSFT) and Google
(GOOG), have made similar concessions to the Chinese to help with online
censorship. Last week, Cruz addressed shareholders at the Google annual
meeting, where co-founder Sergei Brin seemed to dodge questions about
Google's conduct by pointing the finger at Yahoo for helping put Chinese
netizens in jail.
Cruz added, "The bottom line is that none of these companies operating in
China have figured out ways to ensure their customers get all the
information and privacy online that they are entitled to. The leaders of
these companies are supposed to be the smartest and most innovative
thinkers in the world today. Is bowing to an abusive regime really the
best they can do?"
Appearing at the annual shareholder meetings is just one component of a
massive international effort led by Amnesty International, the world's
largest grassroots human rights organization with more than 1.8 million
members globally. Last week AIUSA launched a comprehensive web-based
action at: www.amnestyusa.org/business/censorship.html,
allowing concerned Internet users to send direct messages to U.S.-based
technology giants, demanding they stop assisting foreign governments in
their attempt to curtail freedom of speech on the Internet.
In Congressional testimony, in meetings with the companies and through
their public actions, Amnesty International has made several
recommendations to the companies for addressing these issues, including
pressuring the Chinese government to release internet dissidents and
change their repressive practices and adopting comprehensive human rights
policies based on international standards.
Amnesty International supports the key provisions of the Global Online
Freedom Act of 2006, introduced in March by Representative Chris Smith
(R-NJ). The legislation aims to protect free and open communication online
globally before repressive countries succeed in developing an entirely
separate, heavily censored, widely surveilled, and restricted version of
the Internet.
Background:
For more information on Yahoo's involvement with Internet censorship in
China visit: http://amnestyusa.org/business/yahoo.html
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