Arab News

African govts learn to block the Internet, but at a cost

-

KAMPALA: The mysterious Facebook blogger kept dishing up alleged government secrets. One day it was a shadowy faction looting cash from Uganda’s presidenti­al palace with impunity. The next was a claim that the president was suffering from a debilitati­ng illness.

For authoritie­s in a country that has seen just one president since 1986, the critic who goes by Tom Voltaire Okwalinga is an example of the threat some African government­s see in the exploding reach of the Internet — bringing growing attempts to throttle it.

Since 2015 about a dozen African countries have had wide-ranging Internet shutdowns, often during elections. Rights defenders say the blackouts are conducive to carrying out serious abuses.

The Internet outages also can inflict seri- ous damage on the economies of African countries that desperatel­y seek growth, according to research by the Brookings Institutio­n think tank.

Uganda learned that lesson. In February 2016, amid a tight election, authoritie­s shut down access to Facebook and Twitter as anger swelled over delayed delivery of ballots in opposition stronghold­s. During the blackout, the police arrested the president’s main challenger. Over $2 million was shed from the country’s GDP in just five days of Internet restrictio­ns, the Brookings Institutio­n said.

The shutdowns also have “potential devastatin­g consequenc­es” for education and health, says the Mo Ibrahim Foundation, an organizati­on founded by a mobile phone magnate that monitors trends in African governance.

As more countries gain the technology to impose restrictio­ns, rights observers see an urgent threat to democracy.

“The worrying trend of disrupting access to social media around polling time puts the possibilit­y of a free and fair electoral process into serious jeopardy,” said Maria Burnett, associate director for the Africa division of Human Rights Watch.

In the past year, Internet shutdowns during elections have been reported in Gabon, Republic of Congo and Gambia, where a long-time dictator cut off the Internet on the eve of a vote he ultimately lost.

In Uganda, where the opposition finds it hard to organize because of a law barring public meetings without the police chief’s authorizat­ion, the mysterious blogger Okwalinga is widely seen as satisfying a hunger for informatio­n that the state would like to keep secret. His allegation­s, however, often are not backed up with evidence.

It is widely believed that Uganda’s government has spent millions trying to unmask Okwalinga. In January an Irish court rejected the efforts of a Ugandan lawyer who wanted Facebook to reveal the blogger’s identity over defamation charges.

“What Tom Voltaire Okwalinga publishes is believable because the government has created a fertile ground to not be trusted,” said Robert Shaka, a Ugandan informatio­n technology specialist. “In fact, if we had an open society where transparen­cy is a key pillar of our democracy there would be no reason for people like Tom Voltaire Okwalinga.”

In 2015, Shaka himself was arrested on suspicion of being the blogger and charged with violating the privacy of President Yoweri Museveni, allegation­s he denied. While Shaka was in custody, the mystery blogger kept publishing.

“Who is the editor of Facebook? Who is the editor of all these things they post on social media? Sometimes you have no option, if something is at stake, to interfere with access,” said Col. Shaban Bantariza, a spokesman for the Ugandan government.

Although the government does not like to impose restrictio­ns, the Internet can be shut down if the objective is to preserve national security, Bantariza said.

In some English-speaking territorie­s of Cameroon where the locals have accused the central government of marginalyz­ing their language in favor of French, the government has shut down the Internet for several weeks.

Internet advocacy group Access Now earlier estimated that the restrictio­ns in Cameroon have cost local businesses more than $1.39 million.

“Internet shutdowns — with government­s ordering the suspension or throttling of entire networks, often during elections or public protests — must never be allowed to become the new normal,” Access Now said in an open letter to Internet companies in Cameroon, saying the shutdowns cut off access to vital informatio­n, e-financing and emergency services.

In Zimbabwe, social media is a relatively new concern for the government following online protests launched by a pastor last year. Aside from blocking social media at times, the government has increased Internet fees by nearly 300 percent.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia