STATE OF PRESS FREEDOM IN SOUTHERN AFRICA 2022

Malawi President Dr. Lazarus Chakwera
(third from le�) poses with some
members of the media, including MISA
Malawi chairperson, Teresa Ndanga
(second from right) and Media Council of
Malawi chairperson, Wisdom Chimgwede
(second from le�)
PIC CREDIT: Teresa Chirwa-Ndanga

Equatorial Guinea, Kenya, Morocco, Nigeria,
Zambia, and Zimbabwe were the other African
governments named as Circles customers.(17)

2022 over a WhatsApp political conversation
raises serious concerns about the insidiousness
of surveillance.

He adds that midway through 2021, it was
further revealed that Botswana was also a client
of Cellebrite, a spyware company that sells
phone-hacking equipment.

Mainje was charged under section 86 of Malawi’s
Electronic Transactions and Cyber Security Act
of 2016 for allegedly insulting Malawi’s President
Lazarus Chakwera.

This technology, according to Ndlovu, has
reportedly been deployed to extract data from
the phones of journalists as part of a wider
crackdown on the media.

Since WhatsApp uses end-to-end encryption,
this exchange was not visible to the general
public. Nevertheless, authorities intervened to
detain a person over a private exchange.

It is against this backdrop — of the use of
law and technology to enable the violation of
data and online privacy — that the digital rights
landscape in the country remains a cause for
concern within local civil society.

Equally, the circumstances surrounding the
arrest of Malawian investigative journalist,
Gregory Gondwe, [mentioned earlier] and the
subsequent hacking of the website of the PIJ,
where his work is published, would suggest the
use of surveillance technology by authorities.

The arrest of Chidawawa Mainje on 1 May

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The incident gives credence to concerns that

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