The African Declaration on
Internet Rights and Freedoms
Preamble

E

mphasising that the Internet is an enabling
space and resource for the realisation of all
human rights, including the right to hold opinions without interference, the right to freedom
of expression and information, the right to freedom of assembly and association, the right to
freedom of thought, conscience and religion,
the right to be free from discrimination in all
forms, the right of ethnic, religious or linguistic
minorities to enjoy their own culture, to profess
and practise their own religion, or to use their
own language, and economic, social and cultural rights;
Emphasising that the Internet is particularly relevant to social, economic and human development in Africa;
Affirming that in order to fully benefit from its
development potential, the Internet must be accessible, available and affordable for all persons
in Africa;
Affirming further that the Internet is a vital tool
for the realisation of the right of all people to
participate freely in the governance of their
country, and to enjoy equal access to public
services;
Recalling that a number of regional standards
are relevant to the protection of human rights
on the Internet, in particular the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights of 1981, the
Windhoek Declaration on Promoting an Independent and Pluralistic African Press of 1991,
the African Charter on Broadcasting of 2001,
the Declaration of Principles on Freedom of Expression in Africa of 2002, the African Platform
on Access to Information Declaration of 2011,

and the African Union Convention on Cybersecurity and Personal Data Protection of 2014;
Acknowledging the roles being played by many
African and international organisations, including the African Union Commission, the United
Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA), the NEPAD Planning and Coordinating
Agency and UNESCO, in promoting access to
and use of the Internet in Africa;
Mindful of the continuing efforts of international organisations and other stakeholders to
develop principles that apply human rights to
the Internet, particularly since the Joint Declaration of 2011 concerning Freedom of Expression
and the Internet by the four Special Rapporteurs
on Freedom of Expression: including the United
Nations Human Rights Council resolution of
2012 on The promotion, protection and enjoyment of human rights on the Internet; the UN
General Assembly Resolution of 2013 on The
right to privacy in the digital age; the UN Human Rights Council Resolution of 2014 on The
Internet and Human Rights; the United Nations
Guiding Principles on Business and Human
Rights; the Johannesburg Principles on Freedom
of Expression and National Security; The Right
to Share Principles, The Necessary and Proportionate Principles; and the Manila Principles on
Intermediary Liability;
Concerned by the continuing inequality in access to and use of the Internet, and the increasing use of the Internet by state and non-state
actors as a means of violating individual rights
to privacy and freedom of expression through
mass surveillance and related activities;
Aware that some individuals and groups – in
particular women and girls, people with dis-

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