Press release
12 May 2012
INDIA
Two cyber-activists end fast but campaign against IT Rules gathers pace <http://fr.rsf.org/two-cyber-
More than a year after they came into force, Reporters Without Borders reiterates <http://en.rsf.org/inde-media-
Two of the movement’s campaigners, the cartoonist *Aseem Trivedi* and the citizen journalist *Alok Dixit*, were forced today to end a hunger strike they began on 2 May. Their health had deteriorated considerably and they were hospitalized.
“We have just ended the hunger protest, but not the struggle,” <http://art-leaks.org/> they were quoted as saying. They are demanding the repeal of the IT Rules and support a motion to this effect proposed by Shri. P. Rajeev, a member of the Rajya Sabha, the upper house of the Indian parliament. The motion was due to be discussed on 11 May but was postponed until a later session.
The IT Rules 2011 <http://en.rsf.org/inde-new-
“This has turned technical intermediaries into Web censorship police informants,” Reporters Without Borders said. Although some content categories are justifiably objectionable, other more vague or subjective definitions could jeopardize informational content.”
The IT Rules also impose on cybercafé owners drastic regulations that violate personal data privacy and place a presumption-of-guilt burden on all Indian netizens.
India <http://en.rsf.org/india-
Read online <http://fr.rsf.org/two-cyber-