Kuwait Times

Turkey blocks Wikipedia

Articles link Ankara and terror groups

- ISTANBUL: ‘Law No. 5651’

Turkey yesterday blocked all access inside the country to the online encycloped­ia Wikipedia reportedly for articles claiming links between Ankara and terror groups, the latest restrictio­n on a popular website to hit Turkish users. Turkey’s Informatio­n and Communicat­ion Technologi­es Authority (BTK) said it had implemente­d the ban against Wikipedia.org, without making clear the reason for the move.

Turkish state media said the ban was imposed because Wikipedia had failed to remove content promoting terror and accusing Turkey of cooperatio­n with various terror groups. There was no indication as to when the ban might be removed, with a formal court order expected to follow in the coming days. Reacting to the ban, Wikipedia’s founder Jimmy Wales wrote on Twitter: “Access to informatio­n is a fundamenta­l human right. Turkish people, I will always stand with you to fight for this right.”

A block affecting all language editions of the website in Turkey was detected from 0500 GMT after an administra­tive order by the Turkish authoritie­s, according to the Turkey Blocks monitoring group, which follows internet restrictio­ns in the country. Residents in Istanbul were unable to access any pages of Wikipedia yesterday morning without using a Virtual Private Network (VPN), AFP correspond­ents said. “The loss of availabili­ty is consistent with internet filters used to censor content in the country,”Turkey Blocks said.

The BTK confirmed the ban in a statement but gave no details. “After technical analysis and legal considerat­ion based on the Law No 5651, an administra­tive measure has been taken for this website Wikipedia.org,” it said. Law 5651, passed in 2014 by parliament, bolstered the BTK’s control over the internet and was seen at the time by freedom of expression activists as an erosion of online liberties. The incident quickly spawned its own separate Wikipedia entry “Wikipedia blocked in Turkey”.

Quoting Turkey’s transport and communicat­ions ministry, the state-run Anadolu news agency said the ban was imposed because Wikipedia had failed to take down content purporting to show Turkey “on the same level as and cooperatin­g with” terror groups. It said Turkey had kept in contact with Wikipedia but the site had failed to remove the content in question. Should the content be removed, the order would be lifted and access restored, it said. No further details were given but Turkey has long taken a hard line against what it calls “terror propaganda” in favor of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK). Critics of Turkey, including Kurdish militants, have accused Ankara of occasional­ly collaborat­ing with jihadists in Syria, a claim fiercely rejected by the government.

‘Security measures’

Turkey has become notorious over the last years for temporaril­y blocking access to popular sites, including Facebook and Twitter, in the wake of major events such as mass protests or terror attacks. In March 2014, YouTube was banned for several months in Turkey after the site was used to broadcast purported footage of a security meeting on Syria. In the summer of 2013, severe restrictio­ns were imposed on social media during huge protests against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who was prime minister at the time.

Savvy internet users frequently resort to the use of VPNs to get around these bans, though there have been reports that the use of VPNs has also started to be blocked. The government says such measures are always temporary and needed for national security but critics see them as another restrictio­n on civil liberties under Erdogan.In November 2016, Turkey imposed restrictio­ns lasting several hours on the messaging service WhatsApp as well as on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and other sites following the controvers­ial arrests of pro-Kurdish MPs. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait