China Seen Backing ‘Digital Authoritarianism’ In Latin America
Chinese technology and expertise is making it possible for
Venezuela and Cuba to exercise suffocating control over digital communications
in the two countries, according to insider accounts and several international
investigations.
Venezuela and Cuba do more to block internet access than any
other governments in Latin America, according to the U.S.-based advocacy group
Freedom House, which has documented what it describes as “digital
authoritarianism” in the region since 2018.
“Whoever believes that privacy exists in Venezuela through
email communications, Twitter, WhatsApp, Facebook and Instagram is wrong. All
these tools” are totally subject to government intervention, said Anthony
Daquin, former adviser on computer security matters to the Ministry of Justice
of Venezuela.
Daquin participated between 2002 and 2008 in delegations
sent by former President Hugo Chávez to China to learn how Beijing uses
software to identify Chinese citizens, and to implement a similar system in
Venezuela.
Key to those efforts was the introduction in 2016 of the
“carnet de la patria” or homeland card, developed by the Chinese company ZTE.
While theoretically voluntary, possession of the cards is required to access a
vast range of goods and services, ranging from doctor’s appointments to
government pensions.
The cards were presented as a way to make public services
and supply chains more efficient, but critics denounced them as a form of
“citizen control.”
Daquin said China’s role in recent years has been to provide
technology and technical assistance to help the Venezuelan government process
large amounts of data and monitor people whom the government considers enemies
of the state.
“They have television camera systems, fingerprints, facial
recognition, word algorithm systems for the internet and conversations,” he
said.
Daquin said one of the few means that Venezuelans have to
communicate electronically free from government monitoring is the encrypted
messaging platform Signal, which the government has found it very costly to
control.
The former adviser said Venezuela’s digital surveillance
structure is divided into five “rings,” with “Ring 5 being the most trusted,
100 percent Chinese personnel supervising.”
According to Daquin, the government receives daily reports
from the monitors that become the basis for decisions on media censorship,
internet shutdowns and arbitrary arrests.
US accusations against Chinese companies
Several Chinese technology companies are active in
Venezuela, including ZTE, Huawei and the China National Electronics Import
& Export Corp. (CEIEC). The latter was sanctioned in 2020 by the U.S.
Treasury Department on the grounds that its work in Venezuela had helped the
government of President Nicolas Maduro “restrict internet service” and “conduct
digital surveillance and cyber operations against political opponents.”
The U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee also issued an
alert in 2020. In a report, Big Brother, China Digital Authoritarianism, it
accused Chinese telecommunications companies of facilitating “digital
authoritarianism” around the world and cited Venezuela as a case study.
Specifically, the committee mentions the existence of a team
of ZTE employees working within the facilities of the state telecommunications
company CANTV, which manages the homeland card database.
The document cites an investigation by the Reuters news
agency, which reported it was told by CANTV employees that the card system
allows them to monitor a vast range of information about individuals, including
“birthdays, family information, employment and income, property owned, medical
history, state benefits received, presence on social media, membership of a
political party and whether a person voted.”
“Maduro takes full advantage of Chinese hardware and
services in his effort to control Venezuelan citizens,” the report says.
Sophisticated and simple internet blockades
The Maduro government’s efforts to block access to the
internet by domestic opponents are “very crude,” according to Luis Carlos Díaz,
president of the Venezuelan chapter of the Internet Society, a U.S.-based
nonprofit that advocates for open development of the internet.
He said it takes nothing more than a phone call from a
government official to the operator of a web portal to have a website or social
media outlet blocked for a time.
However, in 2019, Venezuela blocked The Onion Router, or
TOR, one of the most sophisticated systems used globally to allow internet
users to remain anonymous and bypass censorship. The platform directs messages
through a worldwide network of servers so the origin of a message cannot be
identified.
Diaz said that, unlike other recurrent blockades in
Venezuela, the TOR hack did require a higher level of knowledge.
“There, we raised alerts because it was excessively
serious,” he told VOA. “It meant that the Venezuelan government was using
technology like the one used in China to block users who had TOR, a tool used
to circumvent censorship.”
The TOR blockade lasted a week, and Díaz said he doubts that
the Venezuelan government did it by itself, because it lacks the highly trained
people needed for such a complex operation.
China’s role in Cuba
The internet infrastructure in Cuba was also built with
equipment acquired from Chinese companies. The Swedish organization Qurium, in
a report published at the beginning of 2020, said it had detected Huawei eSight
network management software on the Cuban internet. The purpose of the software
is to help filter web searches, according to this organization.
Cuban dissidents say the only way to access pages censored
by the government on the island is through a virtual private network or VPN,
which tricks the system into believing that the user is in another country.
This “is the only way to enter any controlled website,” said
journalist Luz Escobar, who converts web content into PDF format or newsletters
and sends those by email to users of 14yMedio, an independent digital news
outlet that is blocked from uploading its content to the internet. In Cuba,
however, “few people master this technique,” she said.
Internet censorship in Cuba was investigated in 2017 by the
Open Observatory of Network Interference (OONI), a volunteer-based organization
that monitors internet censorship around the world. The group said it was able
to determine that a Chinese company had developed software for public Wi-Fi
portals on the island “because they left comments in the source code in
Chinese.”
“We also found a wide use of Huawei equipment,” said Arturo
Filastó, a project leader at OONI who had traveled to Cuba and tested various
Wi-Fi connection points provided by the government.
Voice of America asked for comments from the three
government entities in question — Cuba, Venezuela and China — but did not
receive responses from any of them before publication.
China continues to tutor countries with an “authoritarian
tendency”
In a 2021 report on internet censorship, Freedom House said
Venezuelan officials, along with representatives from 36 other countries
including Saudi Arabia and Syria, participated in Chinese government training
and seminars on new media and information management.
China has organized forums such as the World Internet
Conference in 2017 “where it imparts its norms to authoritarian-leaning
governments,” the report concluded.
Justin Sherman, an information security expert at the
Atlantic Council’s Cyber Statecraft Initiative, told VOA that Chinese companies
like Huawei and ZTE have “been involved all over the world, not just in
Venezuela, in creating programs of internet censorship surveillance for
governments, intelligence services and police agencies.”
Sherman said it is not clear whether Chinese companies sell
their surveillance technology to authoritarian governments solely for profit.
The thesis of the 2020 Senate Relations Committee report is that there is an
interest in China to go beyond the sale of its technology services to extend
its policy of “digital authoritarianism in the world.”
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