RightsCon, the world’s largest digital rights convention, was canceled this 12 months as a result of stress from the Chinese language authorities, in accordance with the nonprofit group that organizes the annual occasion.
In a statement, Entry Now says it was “instructed that diplomats from the Folks’s Republic of China (PRC) had been placing stress on the Authorities of Zambia as a result of Taiwanese civil society members had been planning to hitch us in particular person.”
The Chinese language Embassy in Washington, DC and the US Taipei Financial and Cultural Consultant Workplace didn’t instantly reply to requests for remark. When WIRED known as the Zambian embassy in Washington, a member of the workers answered the cellphone and transferred the decision to a different workers member who then picked up for a number of seconds earlier than hanging up. A follow-up name went unanswered.
Entry Now says it was instructed “informally from a number of sources” that “to ensure that RightsCon to proceed, we must average particular subjects and exclude communities in danger, together with our Taiwanese members, from in-person and on-line participation.”
RightsCon 2026 was set to characteristic a number of panels on China’s worldwide affect, together with about how Beijing exports digital authoritarianism and spreads disinformation in areas like Africa, in addition to discussions on Chinese language cyberattacks and the worldwide unfold of its censorship and surveillance applied sciences.
Arzu Geybulla, the co-executive director of Entry Now, tells WIRED that “a number of items of knowledge we acquired indicated that overseas interference by the Folks’s Republic of China performed a task within the abrupt disruption of RightsCon 2026.”
Every week earlier than the convention was scheduled to happen in Lusaka, Zambia, the Zambian authorities abruptly introduced that it could be postponed to an unspecified date. In a statement on April 28, the nation’s minister of expertise and science, Felix Mutati, mentioned that sure “audio system and members stay topic to pending administrative and safety clearances.” The next day, Thabo Kawana, Zambia’s minister for data and media added that the “postponement was necessitated by the necessity for complete disclosure of crucial data regarding key thematic points proposed for dialogue through the Summit.”
On April 27, two days earlier than the Zambian authorities’s announcement, Entry Now “grew to become conscious that the in-person participation of individuals from Taiwan had caught the eye of the Authorities of the Folks’s Republic of China. In flip, Chinese language authorities had been, apparently, attempting to affect the Zambian authorities’s strategy to Taiwanese members’ motion throughout the border,” says Geybulla. “Quickly after, the Zambian authorities publicly referred to ‘diplomatic protocols’ and ‘pending administrative and safety clearances’ of members as causes for his or her disrupting RightsCon.”
Open Tradition Basis, a Taiwanese nonprofit group that was scheduled to attend RightsCon this 12 months, says that it was warned by Entry Now that Taiwanese residents might have issues getting into Zambia as a result of potential issues from the Chinese language Embassy. They had been instructed to pause their journey plans whereas the host coordinated with Zambian officers.
Nikki Gladstone, RightsCon director at Entry Now, confirmed to WIRED that the group had been in touch with Taiwanese members about potential points touring to Zambia. “Given the potential entry points this might current to that neighborhood, lots of whom had been set to start touring imminently, we felt an obligation to tell our registered Taiwanese members of this improvement whereas we sought extra particulars and knowledge,” says Gladstone. “We mentioned we’d be hesitant to suggest journey till there was extra readability.”
An worker of one other human rights group, who requested to not be named for safety causes, tells WIRED that after RightsCon was formally postponed, they had been instructed by certainly one of their grant funders that the Chinese language authorities had been pressuring the Zambian authorities for days over the presence of a Taiwanese delegation on the convention.

