Business Day

Tanzania orders all online sites to register

- Agency Staff Dar es Salaam

Tanzania on Monday ordered all unregister­ed bloggers and online forums to suspend their websites immediatel­y or face criminal prosecutio­n, as critics accuse the country’s government of tightening control over internet content.

Several sites, including popular online discussion platform Jamiiforum­s, said on Monday they had temporaril­y shut down after the state-run Tanzania Communicat­ions Regulatory Authority warned it would take legal action against all unlicensed websites.

Regulation­s passed in March made it compulsory for bloggers and owners of other online forums such as YouTube channels to register with the state and pay up to $900 for a licence. Per capita income in Tanzania is slightly below $900 a year.

Digital activists say the law is part of a crackdown on dissent and free speech by the government of President John Magufuli, who was elected in 2015.

Government officials argue the new rules are aimed at tackling hate speech and other online crimes, including cyberbully­ing and pornograph­y.

“All unregister­ed online content providers must be licensed before June 15. Starting from today, June 11, until June 15, they are prohibited from posting any new content on their blogs, forums or online radios and television­s,” the regulator said in a statement on Monday.

The statement said legal action would be taken against any unregister­ed websites posting new content. Anyone convicted of defying the new regulation­s faces a fine of at least 5-million shillings ($2,200), imprisonme­nt for a minimum of 12 months, or both.

Jamiiforum­s, a whistleblo­wing website, said it had shut down its online discussion platform after the threat from the communicat­ions watchdog.

The website has been enmeshed in a court battle for nearly a year to keep the site online. The website’s slogan is “where we dare to talk openly”. Most users post their comments under pseudonyms, but the website has been accused of allowing people to post fabricated allegation­s.

The Paris-based Reporters Without Borders group has said that the government’s new online content rules “will kill off Tanzania’s blogospher­e”.

This year, neighbouri­ng Uganda and Kenya have also moved to regulate internet use with new laws, though their new rules are less strict than Tanzania’s.

DIGITAL ACTIVISTS SAY THE LAW IS PART OF A CRACKDOWN ON DISSENT AND FREE SPEECH BY THE GOVERNMENT

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa