Australia joins alliance to restrict tech exports over human rights abuses

Australia, Denmark and Norway will join the United States in an effort to curb tech exports to those who use them to abuse human rights, officials say.

Summit for Democracy

Some countries at the Summit for Democracy plan to use export controls to curb rights abuses tech. Source: AAP

The White House says Australia, Denmark and Norway will join the United States in an effort to curb technology exports to governments that use the products for repression.

The White House said last week it was forming the group to address "the misuse of certain dual-use technologies that can lead to human rights abuses" and ensure that "critical and emerging technologies work for and not against democratic societies".

On Friday, it revealed the names of countries pledging to work with it on the endeavour, adding that Canada, France, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom supported the move.
"Over the coming year of action, we commit to working to establish a voluntary, non-binding written code of conduct around which like-minded states could politically pledge, to use export control tools to prevent the proliferation of software and other technologies used to enable serious human rights abuses," the member countries said in a statement.

The announcement was made as part of US President Joe Biden's December 9-10 Summit for Democracy, with the goal of helping stop democratic backsliding and the erosion of rights and freedoms worldwide.

The summit invitation list did not include China or Russia.


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2 min read
Published 11 December 2021 1:39pm
Updated 11 December 2021 1:54pm
Source: AAP, SBS



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