Access Now Legal Explainer: Internet and Telecommunications Shutdowns in the Assessment of International Crimes

AUTHOR
Laura Winninger
YEAR
2024
ANNOTATION

Access Now published a report that explains what role internet shutdowns and service disruptions play in the investigations of international crimes. With the case law on international criminal liability in relation to internet shutdowns and service disruptions being meager, Access Now highlights one ruling only - the 2011 ICC Pre-Trial Chamber I decision in the Situation in Libya case - and marks the decision’s significance as the ICC acknowledged shutdowns' relevance. Yet, the report notes the decision is “insufficient to deter authorities from shutting down internet and telecommunications services during conflicts and civil unrest.” Access Now calls on “courts with jurisdiction over international crimes (i) to examine the precedent set by the ICC Pre-Trial Chamber I in the Situation in Libya, and (ii) to give due consideration to shutdowns and disruptions of internet and telecommunications services in evaluating the cases brought before them.

OPEN ACCESS
On
LANGUAGE
English
RESOURCE TYPE
MEDIA TYPE
SUGGESTED CITATION

Laura Winninger. Legal Explainer: Internet and Telecommunications Shutdowns in the Assessment of International Crimes. Access Now, 2024. https://www.accessnow.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Shutdowns-and-ICL-Legal-Explainer.pdf