Table of Contents
Quebec is threatening to outlaw public prayer
Last year, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS launched the Free Speech Dispatch, a regular series covering new and continuing censorship trends and challenges around the world. Our goal is to help readers better understand the global context of free expression. Want to make sure you donāt miss an update? Sign up for our newsletter.
Quebec secularism minister may āstrengthen secularismā by banning public prayer
There doesnāt need to be a tension between secularism, free expression, and freedom of religion. Governments should ensure people are neither forced to adopt, nor abandon, religious views at the whims of the state. But Quebec is pursuing a different route, with the provinceās Secularism Ministerās repeat public promises to ban public prayer.
The details of Jean-FranƧois Robergeās planned legislation are not yet available but he has his āmandate to strengthen secularismā as a reason heāll be introducing a bill to ban prayer in public places this fall. Robergeās commitment follows earlier comments from Premier FranƧois Legault that ā[w]hen we want to pray, we go to a church, we go to a mosque, but not in public places.ā Legault also specifically Islamic prayer as a target.
Alarming new legislation in Canada, worsening repression in Hong Kong, and online global takedowns emerging from India
Alarming new legislation in Canada, worsening repression in Hong Kong, and online global takedowns emerging from India.
Enforcing neutral limits on public activity to ensure traffic isnāt disrupted, for example, would be one thing. But public comments by Quebec officials thus far have suggested this effort to enforce secularism in public spaces will be much broader and limit what religious expression can be conveyed outside the confines of houses of worship.
Thereās other free speech news out of Canada, too. At Techdirt, Mike Masnick that on the other side of the country, the British Columbia Civil Resolution Tribunal issued a troubling $72,000 fine against X because it geo-blocked, rather than globally blocked, non-consensual intimate images the tribunal ordered to be taken down. As Masnick points out, itās part of a growing broader challenge on the global internet where courts and officials are ordering extra-terroritorial takedowns ā can one country censor the internet for everyone? As Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS wrote about last year, Australiaās eSafety commissioner made a similar attempt to globally remove a video on X of a man stabbing a bishop.
And Kneecap, the Irish rap trio thatās faced controversy and even police investigation in the UK for band membersā speech about Israel, Hamas, and Hezbollah, has been from entering Canada. Parliamentary Secretary for Combating Crime Vince Gasparro cited their āhate speechā and āglorification of terrorismā that āare contrary to Canadian values and lawsā as the reason.
Latest from the UK: Graham Linehan, Palestine Action, and Epstein projection arrests during Trumpās visit
- It seems the UKās free speech woes are making headlines every week, but that was especially true with the arrest of Graham Linehan, who was by five officers when he arrived in Heathrow Airport from Arizona earlier this month. Linehan was arrested for a series of posts on X, including one where he said if āa trans-identified male is in a female only spaceā¦call the cops, and if all else fails, punch him in the balls.ā As my colleague Jacob Mchangama explained about the arrest, āa provocative tweet from more than four months ago suggesting that someone āpunchā others in a hypothetical situation does not meet any meaningful threshold of incitement (imminent or not).ā
- Public attention on the UKās average of a day for online expression may be hitting its mark. Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said in in the Commons that āthere is a line between content that is offensive, rude, ill-mannered, and incitement to violence, incitement to hatred.ā She added that āit is important that we police that line between these types of comments effectively, so that everybody in this country can have confidence in our policing system, but also confidence in exercising their rights under the law of our land.ā Her words follow from Met Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley, who said āI donāt believe we should be policing toxic culture wars debates and officers are currently in an impossible position.ā
- The mass arrests of protesters who āexpress supportā ā to be clear, just through words ā for banned group Palestine Action continue full steam ahead. In one weekend this month, police over 400 protesters, some of whom were taken in just for holding signs reading, āI oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action.ā Protest organizers were also .
- President Trump, fresh off to set the U.S. Department of Justice on people who engage in so-called āhate speechā against him, was at the center of some speech controversies during his visit to the UK last week. First, four activists were after projecting, without permission, images of Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein onto Windsor Castle. The statute under which they were arrested should certainly raise eyebrows. They were taken in for suspicion of ā,ā which targets āindecent or grossly offensiveā messages intended to ācause distress or anxiety to the recipient.ā Similarly, activists when police stopped them from driving an advertising van featuring images of Trump and Epstein through Windsor, where the president was staying.
Blasphemy news: Nigerian mob executes alleged offender, and Moroccan feminist found guilty
As I write about regularly at the Free Speech Dispatch, blasphemy is not only still a criminal act in dozens of countries, but an offense for which the allegation alone can sometimes result in a public killing ā no judge, no jury, just executioners. So was the case in Nigeria weeks ago when a mob a woman by burning her to death after she was accused of blaspheming against the Prophet Muhammad. The victim, a food vendor, was accused of making a blasphemous remark after āa man jokingly proposed marriageā to her.
And Moroccan feminist Ibtissam Lachgar, whose arrest I discussed in the last Dispatch, was found guilty and sentenced to two and a half years in prison, along with a $5,000 fine, for blasphemy after a photo of herself wearing a shirt with the message, āAllah is Lesbian.ā
Chinese mining company weaponizes cybercrime law against Sierra Leone journalist
Chinese-owned mining company Leone Rock Metal Group filed a with Sierra Leoneās Criminal Investigation Department against editor Thomas Dixon after he published an investigation alleging labor violations at the company. Dixon was detained and interrogated for hours on charges of ācyberbullying and stalking.ā He also the company āoffered to drop its complaint if he agreed never to report on the company againāa condition he flatly rejected.ā Another journalist was on similar charges just after Dixon was released on bail.
Chinaās censorship goes global ā from secret police stations to video games
2025 is off to a repressive start, from secret police stations in New York to persecution in Russia, Kenya, and more.
Rapid free speech developments all across Asia
- Singaporeās Home Affairs and Law Minister Kasiviswanathan Shanmugam, who is and also coordinating minister for National Security, and Manpower Minister Tan See Leng are Online Citizen editor Terry Xu ā and attempting to get a court in Taiwan, where Xu lives, to intervene. Theyāre suing over Xuās reporting on Singaporeās luxury property market.
- Indiaās Supreme Court content creators to apologize for mocking disabilities in their online content. āInfluencers commercialise speech. When a speech falls in the ambit of commercial or prohibitive categories, the immunity under right to free speech is not available,ā the justices said.
- Cambodiaās National Assembly unanimously legislation allowing those who ācolludeā with foreign forces or are involved in ādestruction of sovereignty, territorial integrity and national securityā to be stripped of citizenship. Rights groups said it āwill have a disastrously chilling effect on the freedom of speech of all Cambodian citizens.ā
- American comedian Sammy Obeid is that shows he planned to hold in Singapore were canceled because the Infocomm Media Development Authority wouldnāt issue him the permits over the content of his comedy. IMDA said it wouldnāt issue the permits because Obeid submitted them too late ā but Obeid claims the delays were ultimately because of issues with his script discussing Israel in the show. And under the Protection from Online Falsehoods and Manipulation Act, Obeid has also been to carry corrections to social media posts accusing Singapore of censorship over the incident.
- The Chinese government has had a busy month of international art censorship. Weeks after successfully pressuring a Thai art gallery to censor an exhibit criticizing authoritarian governments, Chinese officials also pushed back against a at the Republic of Kazakhstanās Central State Museum. The day before the show was set to open āthe museum abruptly announced that it would begin a one-month renovation.ā
- Bihar police a 20-year-old man for using āabusive languageā against Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at a political rally.
- Hong Kongās schools must now details of activities held by all outside organizations and individuals, as well as the backgrounds of the organizers and guests, to ensure they ādo not involve contents that endanger national security, nor promote political propaganda and improper values.ā
- Indonesian officers have arrested of protesters in recent weeks who demonstrated against President Prabowo Subianto Djojohadikusumoās policies. The protests āwhen an armored police vehicle hit and killed a rideshare driver.ā
- Nepal is still reeling after mass protests in response to government corruption and unpopular policies, including a on social media platforms. Dozens were in the protests and the Prime Minister has since and not been seen publicly.
- The full and total silencing of women under the Taliban continues. Now, books written by women are from Afghanistanās higher education system.
- Punishment under Thailandās ban on criticism or mockery of the royal family, lese-majeste, continues to crush political dissent in the country. Peopleās Party MP Chonthicha Jangrew was to two years and eight months for Facebook posts that āinsulted the monarchy, incited social conflict and threatened national security.ā Influencer Aniwat Prathumthin was given a suspended sentence for years old Facebook posts and, as part of her sentence, must complete on royal holidays. But there was some positive news: Anchan Preelert, a Thai woman who was sentenced to a shocking 43 years for lese-majeste in 2021, was and freed last month.
Powerful Israeli minister to cut funding for awards event over winning filmās content
Miki Zohar, Israelās culture and sports minister, has to revoke funding for the Ophir Awards after āThe Sea,ā an āArabic-language drama about a Palestinian boy from the West Bank who risks his life to go to the beach in Tel Aviv,ā won the top prize. Zohar says the Ophir ceremony, for which film awards are voted on by the Israeli Academy of Film and Television, āspit in the face of Israeli citizensā and that āThe Seaā portrays Israeli soldiers āin a defamatory and false way.ā
Itās been a bad month for free speech, basically everywhere. But there is good news.
Egyptian-British writer and human rights activist Alaa Abd el-Fattah has been in prison in Egypt since 2019 for āspreading false news and harming Egyptās national interestā after sharing a social media post about a prisonerās death. But after years of campaigning from activists and his family ā including his mother, who has undergone multiple hunger strikes ā Abd el-Fattah will be after a pardon from Egyptian president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.
Recent Articles
Get the latest free speech news and analysis from Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS.
Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS answers your questions
Podcast
Texas runs afoul of the First Amendment with new limits on faculty course materials
Free speech advocates rally to support Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās defense of First Amendment protections for drag shows