Arab Times

Govts learn to block the Net, but at cost

‘Conducive to abuses’

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KAMPALA, Uganda, March 14, (AP): 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 serious 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.

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