Ahmed Mansoor

Ahmed Mansoor Al Shehhi is an Emirati activist who was arrested as one of the UAE Five in April 2011 on charges of breaking United Arab Emirates law of defamation by insulting heads of state, namely UAE president Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, vice president Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, and Abu Dhabi crown prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan through running an anti-government website that express anti-government views. He was pardoned by UAE's president Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed.[1]

In 2015, Mansoor received the Martin Ennals Award for Human Rights Defenders.[1]

Mansoor was arrested again in March 2017 on charges of using social media platforms to threaten public order and publish false and misleading information. He was found guilty and convicted for threatening state security and given a prison sentence of 10 years.

Surveillance

Following his pardon, Mansoor was monitored in 2013–2014 by the UAE government using mobile phone spyware developed by the NSO Group.[2][3] around the same time had his passport confiscated, his car stolen, his email hacked, his location tracked, his bank account emptied, and was beaten by strangers twice in the same week.[2]

Around 2016–2017, Mansoor was targeted again by UAE contractor DarkMatter.[3] This occurred under Project Raven, a clandestine surveillance and hacking operation targeting other governments, militants, and human rights activists critical of the UAE monarchy, which came to light in January 2019.[4] Ahmed Mansoor was code named "Egret" in Project Raven, while another main target, Rori Donaghy, was code named "Gyro".[4] By June 2017 Project Raven had hacked into mobile device of Mansoor’s wife, Nadia, and given her the code name "Purple Egret".[4]

Arrest

Mansoor was detained again in March 2017, accused of using social media platforms to "publish false and misleading information".[5][6] UN human rights experts considered his arrest and imprisonment "a direct attack on the legitimate work of human rights defenders in the UAE".[7] In March 2018, after over a year of detention, much of it in solitary confinement, he was sentenced to ten years in prison and fined 1,000,000 Emirati dirham.[8]

In April 2019, the Human Rights Watch raised concerns over Mansoor’s deteriorating health due to his hunger strike, which he started a month back to protest against his unjust imprisonment. The organization called for his urgent release.[9]

gollark: Maybe it's some sort of version mismatch.
gollark: I think CUDA is a bit faster generally, but only works on Nvidia cards.
gollark: Also probably not. The GPU's processor cores would be implemented in actual silicon directly, instead of whatever reprogrammable stuff FPGAs use.
gollark: I don't think a FPGA would actually be faster than a GPU, if you're just putting some general-purpose processors on it.
gollark: But most remotely modern and decent GPUs will massively outperform integrated GPUs.

See also

References

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