Yahoo has settled a lawsuit filed by jailed Chinese dissidents alleging the Internet company should be held accountable for their imprisonment and torture.
The settlement comes after Yahoo executives last week went to Capitol Hill to apologize to family members of the dissidents and to get a tongue-lashing by lawmakers for the company’s role in the jailings.
On Tuesday, the company and the plaintiffs settled, ending the lawsuit that was filed in April in U.S. District Court for the California Northern District.
In their joint stipulation filed with the court, the parties said they had agreed to dismiss with prejudice all claims “based on a private settlement understanding.” In addition, Yahoo agreed to cover the plaintiffs’ legal costs.
The document doesn’t contain any other details about the settlement agreement.
The dissidents remain in jail, which is obviously something that this settlement doesn’t resolve, said Theresa Harris, international justice project director at the World Organization for Human Rights USA, the Washington, D.C., group representing the plaintiffs.
By settling the case under terms they consider fair, the families of the plaintiffs can focus all their energies on helping their loved ones regain their freedom, Harris said.
In a written statement, Yahoo said it will provide “financial, humanitarian and legal support to these families” and create a separate “humanitarian relief fund” for other dissidents and their families.
“After meeting with the families, it was clear to me what we had to do to make this right for them, for Yahoo and for the future,” Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang said in the statement, adding that Yahoo is committed to matching its actions with its values worldwide.
Although this particular lawsuit has been settled, Yahoo and other Internet companies will continue grappling with the larger problem: complying with local laws and regulations that may violate human rights and freedom of speech.
Shareholders, human rights groups, press freedom watchdogs and lawmakers have turned on the heat on Yahoo, Google and other U.S.-based Internet companies for what they consider questionable policies abroad. Some of these practices are providing information to governments so that they can hound individuals and curtail their freedom of expression, as well as censoring search-engine results that governments find politically objectionable.
In late August, Yahoo requested that the court dismiss the case, with its chief argument being that the U.S. justice system was the wrong venue for the case.
“This is a lawsuit by citizens of China imprisoned for using the Internet in China to express political views in violation of China law. It is a political case challenging the laws and actions of the Chinese government. It has no place in the American courts,” the 51-page filing read.
After stating that Yahoo “deeply sympathizes with the plaintiffs and their families and does not condone the suppression of their rights and liberty by their government,” the company stated that it and its Chinese subsidiaries must comply with the laws of China.
The plaintiffs had argued in their lawsuit that Yahoo and Yahoo Hong Kong Ltd. violated a series of U.S. and international laws by providing information to the Chinese government that led to the arrest and torture of journalists Wang Xiaoning and Shi Tao.
The plaintiffs sought, among other things, awards of a variety of damages; declaration that the defendants violated international law; a requirement that the defendants actively help to secure the release of detained plaintiffs; and an injunction barring the defendants from “any further disclosures of user information” to prevent future abuses.
Last week, Representative Tom Lantos, a California Democrat and chairman of the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee, ripped into Yang over Yahoo’s role in the case.
During the hearing, Lantos also blasted Yahoo General Counsel Michael Callahan for testimony Callahan gave last year to Congress about the jailing of the dissidents.