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Iranian agents accused of attempted assassination on U.S. soil ā again

WATCH VIDEO: Iranian woman brutally arrested for removing hijab.
This year, FIRElaunched 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. The previous entry covered free speech news out of Europe, the sedition crackdown in Hong Kong, efforts to control discussion of foreign governments in Canada ā and the U.S. ā and more. Want to make sure you donāt miss an update? Sign up for our newsletter.
This month was so busy that weāll have a second part to this post with more global speech news out later this week. Stay tuned for updates on free speech in the UK, media censorship, and much moreā¦
Iranian journalist and activist faces another assassination attempt in the U.S. ā and sheās not the only one
Agents of the Iranian government once again journalist and womenās rights activist Masih Alinejad this year, according to a newly released by the U.S. Attorneyās Office of the Southern District of New York. One of the men involved in the plot reportedly claimed he participated in a plan to kill former president Donald Trump, as well.

This is not the first time Iran-affiliated agents have tried to Alinejad on U.S. soil ā and Iran is not the only country accused of organizing assassination attempts outside its borders. In October, the Department of Justice charged former Indian intelligence official Vikash Yadav in a targeting New York-based Sikh separatist leader Gurpatwant Singh Pannun. Similarly, Canadian officials four Indian nationals for their assassination of Pannunās associate Hardeep Singh Nijjar, who was in June 2023.
Widespread crackdown on critics
While some nations have been bold enough to attempt to use violence to silence their opponents overseas, many are still sticking to the tried-and-true methods of using police, prisons, and courts to punish those within their borders. Hereās the latest in the crackdown on government critics:
- Justice Minister Yariv Levin is pushing for a limiting Israelisā ability to discuss sanctions against the country. In a letter to Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara, Levin called for legislation āstipulating that actions by Israeli citizens to promote or encourage international sanctions on Israel, its leaders, security forces, and citizens shall constitute a criminal offense punishable by ten years in prison.ā He also asked for the penalties to double during war time.
- Moroccan economist Fouad Abdelmoumni was over government criticism heād posted on social media in late October during French President Emmanuel Macronās visit to the country. Heās now under investigation for āsuspicion of disseminating false information and accusing others of crimes on social mediaā and could face years in prison under Moroccoās cybercrime laws.
- Azerbaijan is the site of the United Nations Climate Change Conference this month and is preparing for it the way authoritarian states know best: widespread repression. In the leadup to the climate summit, dozens of activists and reporters.
- Victor Dupont, a French PhD student at Aix-Marseille University, was arrested in Tunisia while the social and professional lives of people who took part in the countryās 2011 revolution. Dupont is the latest student to face repercussions while conducting field research abroad.
- Malian authorities arrested politician Issa Kaou NāDjim for the military leaders of Burkina Faso, which violated Maliās ban on insulting a foreign head of state.
- Notoriously litigious Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan is suing Ozgur Ozel, the head of the Republican Peopleās Party, and Istanbulās mayor Ekrem Imamoglu for about him at a public event. Erdogan accused Ozel of āpublicly insulting the presidentā and āclearly committing a crime against the reputation and honour of the office of the presidency.ā Among the charges against Imamoglu are that he āacted with the aim of humiliating the president in front of the public.ā
- Iranian police arrested and a woman who challenged the countryās severe compulsory hijab laws. The woman, a student at Tehranās Islamic Azad University, was forced into a car by police after removing her clothes in protest of campus security officialsā enforcement of Iranās headscarf rules.
Censorship in China ā and how pandas are used to export it abroad

Readers will not be surprised to learn that there are more disturbing tales of censorship emerging from China in recent weeks. The first target? Halloween costumes. Police created a heavy presence in popular areas for Halloween events, and even brought partygoers in for āout of apparent fear the holiday has become a rallying point for youth dissatisfaction.ā
Meanwhile, Uyghur filmmaker Ikram Nurmehmet and four associates were sentenced to over five years in prison on āseparatismā and āterrorismā charges, and Nurmehmet he was tortured during interrogations.
And in a horrific attack last week, a man in Zhuhai murdered dozens of people, and injured dozens more, by driving his SUV into a crowd. But information about the attack ā in-person memorials, social media discussion, reports from journalists ā has been online and off as government officials and censors seek to control public perception of the incident.

These speech restrictions are taking place within Chinaās borders, but there are some the Chinese government is exporting, too. Take this from the New York Times, for example. American zoos ā including taxpayer-funded zoos ā must agree to a series of speech restrictions from the government-run China Wildlife Conservation Association when they agree to host pandas. Those restrictions include limits on what zoo administrators can discuss with media about panda health and āany other important mattersā and even the language zoos can use to discuss their panda contracts themselves. (Donāt call it a rental.)
Restrictions on ā and from ā Big Tech

Many of todayās free speech fights are occurring in tech, whether from government regulations of platforms and the speech they host or from how those sites themselves choose to moderate user content. Hereās how the tech landscape has evolved in recent weeks on the government side:
- Australia is a major blow against young peopleās ability to express themselves online. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is promising a āworld-leadingā ban on social media use for children under age 16. The legislation, which will be introduced to parliament soon, will not even offer an exemption for parental approval. Such internet legislation is like a bad head cold. Expect it to spread to other countries.
- And encrypted messaging app Session was based in Australia ā but not anymore. The appās leadership announced it will be āafter the countryās federal law enforcement agency visited an employeeās residence and asked them questions about the app and a particular user.ā The police reportedly didnāt have a warrant, and didnāt go through the appās official channels to ask for information about the company's operations.
- Irelandās media regulators social media platforms X, TikTok, and Instagram to comply with new rules āto protect their services from being used for the dissemination of terrorist content.ā If their remediation efforts āare not sufficientā media regulator CoimisiĆŗn na MeĆ”n ācan impose fines of up to 4% of global revenue.ā
- Hong Kong police pressured U.S. web-hosting company Automattic to take down the website of pro-democracy group Flow HK, its activists engaged in secession, subversion, collusion, and sedition. Laudably, Automattic refused. (Readers may remember that earlier this year, Automattic in its years-long legal battle against censorship orders from the Turkish government.)
- Both and blocked Discord in October over the content available on the messaging site.
- The European Union is the Dublin-based Appeals Center Europe, an āout of court dispute settlement bodyā for social media users to challenge content moderation decisions made on YouTube, TikTok, and Facebook. It will begin hearing cases this year but the decisions on whether content does or doesnāt violate platform rules will not be public, and will not be binding.
- Mauritius issued a ahead of its parliamentary elections this month after leaked secret recordings of political and business leaders created a scandal in the country.
- Pakistanās Council of Islamic Ideology, a high-ranking religious advisory council, is encouraging a on VPN usage to stop the āspread of evil.ā Itās the latest effort to ban blasphemy and other forms of disapproved speech from Pakistanās internet.

Brazil bans X ā and threatens daily $9,000 fine for those still trying to use it
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The Free Speech Dispatch is a regular series covering new and continuing censorship trends and challenges around the world.
And now hereās the latest developments on how tech companies have chosen to moderate content:
- Elon Muskās X with orders to remove at least 100 journalistsā and activistsā accounts in Turkey after the government cracked down on posts about the death of exiled Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen. The government is also investigating nearly 200 people for āspreading terrorist propagandaā in their posts about Gulenās death.
- Radio Free Asia is a leap in Facebookās compliance with censorship orders from Hong Kongās government, finding a five time increase in granted takedown orders from 2019 to 2023. The jump in restrictions no doubt relates to the aggressive new speech laws imposed in the city.
- Perennially acquiescent Apple continues to grant the Russian governmentās censorship orders. In recent weeks, Apple has restricted Russiansā to Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty as well as from outlets including The Insider, Echo of Moscow, and BBC Russian.
- A Uyghur student at Istanbul University is alleging her video challenging a Turkish politician over Chinaās policies on Uyghurs for violating community standards. This is users have accused TikTok of taking down content challenging the Chinese government, especially its Xinjiang policies.
Sweden jails Quran-burning politician

A Swedish court far-right politician Rasmus Paludan to four months in prison on two counts of incitement against an ethnic group and one count of insult after āputting bacon in and around a Qurāan and then setting fire to, kicking and spitting on the Qurāan.ā Paludan also said āMuslims do not like western democracy and freedom of speechā and that ācountries are negatively affected by Muslims going there.ā
This ruling comes in the aftermath of a series of high profile Quran burnings in Sweden and Denmark that resulted in Denmarkās deeply troubling decision to āinappropriate treatmentā of religious texts ā effectively a ban on Quran burnings.
Thatās not all from this monthās edition of the Free Speech Dispatch. Check back later this week for another update, or sign up for our newsletter to see it in your inbox.
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