Full Text Of Slovenian Ambassador's Apology For Signing ACTA

from the wow dept

http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20120202/02305917633/full-text-slovenian-ambassadors-apology-signing-acta.shtml

Yesterday, we wrote about the Slovenian ambassador to Japan, Helena Drnovsek 
Zorko, apologizing for signing ACTA last week in Japan. We later updated the 
post with a link to a Google translation of her apology that was a bit 
confusing. However, she's also posted a version in English, in which she admits 
that she signed it because her government told her to, and "out of civic 
carelessness" in not bothering to understand what ACTA meant before signing it. 
She talks about being overworked, and apologizing to her children for signing 
ACTA. She also expresses exasperation at the fact that the hatred of many 
people has been directed at her, rather than at her government and others who 
actually created ACTA. The whole thing is worth a read, so we are posting it in 
its entirety below:

On Thursday, 26th January, 2012, I signed the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade 
Agreement (ACTA) on behalf of the Republic of Slovenia, following the directive 
and authorisation of the Slovenian government. A somewhat longer clarification 
of the signature can be found on the Media section of the Ministry of Foreign 
Affairs website, which explains the role of the Ministry and my role as the 
Slovenian Ambassador to Japan.  This explanation states that I signed the 
agreement because I was instructed to do so by the government, and because it 
is a part of my job.

And yet, why did I sign ACTA. Every day there is a barrage of questions in my 
inbox and on Facebook from mostly kind and somewhat baffled people, who cannot 
understand how it occurred to me to sign an agreement so damaging to the state 
and citizens. With this reply, which is of a purely personal nature and 
expresses only my personal views, I wish to respond to all those people, all my 
friends and acquaintances who have remained quiet, all Anonymous, and not least 
also to myself and to my children.

I signed ACTA out of civic carelessness, because I did not pay enough 
attention. Quite simply, I did not clearly connect the agreement I had been 
instructed to sign with the agreement that, according to my own civic 
conviction, limits and withholds the freedom of engagement on the largest and 
most significant network in human history, and thus limits particularly the 
future of our children. I allowed myself a period of civic complacency, for a 
short time I unplugged myself from media reports from Slovenia, I took a break 
from Avaaz and its inflation of petitions, quite simply I allowed myself a 
rest. In my defence, I want to add that I very much needed this rest and that I 
am still having trouble gaining enough energy for the upcoming dragon year. At 
the same time, I am tackling a workload that increased, not lessened, with the 
advent of the current year. All in line with a motto that has become familiar 
to us all, likely not only diplomats: less for more. Less money and fewer 
people for more work. And then you overlook the significance of what you are 
signing. And you wake up the following morning with the weight of the 
unbearable lightness of some signature.

First I apologised to my children. Then I tried to reply to those acquaintances 
and strangers who expressed their surprise and horror. Because there are more 
and more of them, I am responding to them publicly. I want to apologise because 
I carried out my official duty, but not my civic duty. I don’t know how many 
options I had with regard to not signing, but I could have tried. I did not. I 
missed an opportunity to fight for the right of conscientious objection on the 
part of us bureaucrats.

But there is a second, very important reason why I am writing this. There has 
been a demonization of “some sneak”, that is me, who in far-off Tokyo secretly 
signed something on her own initiative.  This was heard in the Slovenian 
parliament and in the Slovenian media, and it is spreading on the web. It is 
dangerous particularly because it conceals the responsibility of those who had 
the power to decide, and did in fact decide, that Slovenia would be a signatory 
of ACTA. This was decided by the Slovenian government and by the parliamentary 
committee for EU matters, and before that, Slovenia was for quite some time 
involved in coordinating the agreement. All this was done with too little 
transparency, judging by the outraged responses that have appeared following 
the signing. Back then, the Slovenian media did not demonise this decision to 
the same extent as they now demonise my signature. This I consider very 
dangerous for the continuous (non-)development of democracy in Slovenia. At the 
same time, this means that I was not the only one whose attention slipped, that 
we, as Slovenian citizens, neglected our civic duty. And that there may be a 
little known party in the Slovenian political space that missed an excellent 
opportunity to gain votes in the recently concluded electoral struggle.

On Saturday, 4th February, a protest is planned in Ljubljana for those who 
object to the ratification of ACTA. The true concern and determination of those 
Slovenian citizens who feel that the agreement must be stopped will be 
reflected in the number of people who attend this protest. I would like to ask 
for somebody to please attend in my name. One of my concerned correspondents 
asked me what my brother, the late Dr. Janez Drnovsek , would have thought of 
my signature. The struggle to protect civic freedoms is most certainly in the 
spirit of his heritage, much more so than the removal or non-removal of some 
statue. Let my example be a cautionary tale of how swiftly we can make mistakes 
if we allow ourselves to slip. And if nothing else, we then sleep very badly.

 
Helena Drnovsek Zorko


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Just because i'm near the punchbowl doesn't mean I'm also drinking from it.

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