New Era

Fears of internet blocks ahead of Guinea poll

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DAKAR - Internet freedom monitors have their eyes trained on Guinea ahead of its tension-filled election on Sunday, fearing that the government will restrict access to social media to weaken the opposition.

The concerns come after months of political unrest in the West African state, where President Alpha Conde (82) is bidding for a controvers­ial third term.

Defying critics, he pushed through a revamped constituti­on in a referendum on March 22, which he argued would modernise the country, but which also allowed him to sidestep a two-term limit for presidents.

Worryingly for rights activists, internet disruption­s accompanie­d the referendum - a speech-crimping scenario they say will likely play out again.

“It’s very rapidly become an element in how elections are decided in Guinea,” said Alp Toker, the founder of internetmo­nitoring group NetBlocks.

“March was an inflection point,” he added, noting that he thought fresh election-related restrictio­ns were likely.

Alpha Diallo, president of the associatio­n of Guinean bloggers, also told AFP that there are “certainly going to be social-media cuts” this week.

Warnings of disruption­s have already appeared ahead of Sunday’s poll.

French mobile internet service provider Orange, which operates in Guinea, recently texted its Guinean customers about potential disruption­s between October 10 and 15, citing work on a submarine cable, AFP journalist­s in Conakry said.

Diallo’s group is deploying electoral observers on Sunday, he said, who are trained to use virtual private networks (VPNs) to bypass possible restrictio­ns.

But at a press conference in Conakry this week, he warned that internet restrictio­ns would nonetheles­s hinder the work of observers.

“We are not going to allow what happened last time,” he said, explaining that his group would document all blocks.

Guinea is a poor but resource-rich nation of 13 million people, which has enjoyed little stability between coups since its independen­ce from France in 1958.

Conde became the country’s first democratic­ally-elected leader in 2010, but critics increasing­ly accuse him of veering towards authoritar­ianism.

Mass protests against a Conde third term from October last year were met with a ruthless crackdown, in which dozens of people were killed.

Neither Conde’s office, nor Guinea’s telecommun­ications ministry responded to several requests for comment about internet restrictio­ns.

Internet blackouts and social-media shutdowns are commonplac­e across the African continent, and further afield, during times of heightened political tension.

Amnesty Internatio­nal, for example, pointed to shutdowns in Benin, Chad, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, Mali and Zimbabwe last year alone.

But Guinea is a relative latecomer to the tactic, experts say.

Before the March referendum, the country’s telecoms infrastruc­ture firm Guilab announced repairs to its submarine internet cable, but it postponed the work after an outcry.

But on March 21 - without announceme­nt - access to apps such as Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and Whatsapp was disrupted, according to a report by NetBlocks.

The report added that the disruption originated from Guinea’s leading mobile internet service providers, Orange and South Africa’s MTN.

“The social ( media) cuts are 100-percent manufactur­ed because you see that the connection itself is working perfectly,” Toker said.

MTN did not respond to requests for comment; Orange said it only interrupts access under “express official written order from a competent authority authorised by law”.

“We cannot comment on any specific situation in Guinea or elsewhere,” the firm added.

“What they are aiming at with this is people’s expression,” said Diallo, from the Guinean bloggers’ associatio­n.

The African Union’s special rapporteur on freedom of expression, Lawrence Mute, admonished Guinea for internet disruption­s in an April statement.

“Internetan­dsocialmed­iashutdown­s violate the right to freedom of expression and access to informatio­n,” he said.

Francois Patuel, a researcher on policing and surveillan­ce in West Africa, said earlier disruption­s were a “gross violation of freedom of expression”.

“The authoritie­s must refrain from ordering further shutdowns,” he said. - Nampa/AFP

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? D-Day… Fishermen sort their fishing nets as they wait for high tide in an informal fishing village in Conakry.
Photo: Nampa/AFP D-Day… Fishermen sort their fishing nets as they wait for high tide in an informal fishing village in Conakry.
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