Headlines
  • At least five ballistic missile launches from Iran have been detected by the Israelis since midnight.
  • Mehrabad Airport in Tehran is hit by strikes
  • The Prince Sultan Air Base was the target of a ballistic missile that Saudi Arabia's military intercepted and destroyed, according to the country's defense ministry.
  • Heavy gunfire on Friday injured three peacekeepers from the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon inside their base in southwest Lebanon.
  • To put an end to the bloodshed, UN Secretary-General António Guterres urged serious diplomatic negotiations..
  • In a social media post, President Trump said that "no deal" other than "unconditional surrender" will be with Iran.
  • Iran reportedly receives intelligence from Russia on US targets.

More Details

Internet Shutdowns Mushroom Across Africa

The last two years have been grim for internet access on the African continent, according to analyst Robert Besseling of risk-assessment firm EXX Africa, and the situation may be getting worse. In the last four weeks alone, no fewer than five African governments have temporarily shut down internet access amid political crises and unrest.

 

Public Internet by Gerd Altmann is licensed under
Pixabay License

While this practice dates back several years, he says it has accelerated and hit nations that rely on the internet for spreading information and for internet-based commerce, like Zimbabwe.

“We counted 21 shutdowns across Africa in 2018, and so far this year in the first three weeks of 2019, we saw shutdowns in five countries: again, Cameroon, as well as most prominently, Zimbabwe, as well as during the elections in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and unrest in Sudan, as well as briefly following the attempted coup in Gabon,” Besseling said.

Those five nations have one thing in common: recent political unrest. Congo’s shutdown occurred during a chaotic, disputed, long-delayed election and its contentious aftermath. In Zimbabwe, fuel price hikes led to violent protests, which led to even more violent crackdowns by security officials, which was followed by an internet blackout.

Congolese rights activist Sylvain Saluseke – who lives in self-imposed exile outside of the country — says his compatriots in pro-democracy youth group LUCHA struggled under the blackout as they tried to carry out their mission of observing the December 30 polls and documenting the aftermath.

“That was a major hindrance,” he told VOA. “Of course, beyond that, there have always been these questions of how less are we able to pass on information or exchange information, and that in itself raised the risk of if and when somebody has been arrested, or somebody goes into any dangerous situations or risky situations.”

Stopping the flow of information is the point of these internet shutdowns, argues Edgar Munatsi of the Zimbabwe Association of Doctors for Human Rights. Other rights groups have claimed the same, saying this was a tactic to give cover to the rampant human rights abuses that happened — and still may be happening — in Zimbabwe.

“Beyond just stopping people from organizing themselves, was the need to black out, in terms of the media and the international community, to what was taking place during the night, and sometimes during the day,” Munatsi told journalists. “Because a lot of atrocities were committed during the night and during the internet shutdowns. If you realize, most civil society leaders and activists in Zimbabwe were abducted during the night, and no one knows, up to now, where they are, some of them.”

Besseling, who assesses the continent from a business perspective, notes that African nations have an easier time shutting down or forcibly slowing down internet services, because many African telecom companies are under state control.

The shutdowns come at a high cost, he says.

“If you were to shut down the internet throughout the geography of an economically important country, then you can estimate of course a far higher cost. In a country like Kenya, for example, the cost would be $6.3 million a day, in the case the internet was shut down across the country.”

Those losses come, he said, through disruptions in information networks — such as internet-accessible stock and commodity price indices — and the unavailability of e-commerce and electronic banking.

He said there are other losses that can’t be easily quantified, though, like getting reliable information about what’s going on around you, or perhaps hardest of all, losing touch with loved ones during a time of crisis~VOA

Related Article

Mass Blocking of Social Media and…

Amnesty urged the authority that this decision should be overturned and the Turkish authorities must ...
August 6, 2019

No Special Help From Australia for…

Julien Assange sought refuge in the Ecuadorian embassy in London in 2012 to avoid extradition to Swe ...
April 13, 2019

Freedom of Expression!

Freedom of Expression does not give us the right to abuse others ...
December 23, 2018

Other Article

Pick of the Day

UN Permanent Representative of Iran Briefs…

Amir Saeid Iravani, Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations, ...
March 7, 2026
Bizzare News

Malaysian Man Holds Record for Having…

Malaysian Prathab Muniandy has ten more teeth than the typical human. This indicates that he has the ...
March 6, 2026
Pet Corner

Identify the Dog Breed

Identify dog and cat breeds using pictures.ideal match for you.Consider about these facts before pur ...
Prevent Cyber Crime

Fileless Malware

A type of malicious software known as "fileless malware" infects a computer by using reliable apps. ...
Pick of the Day

UN Security Council Meets on Energy,…

Chris Wright, Secretary of Energy of the United States and President of the United Nations Security ...
Bizzare News

Just Before it Collapses, New Jersey…

A horrifying collapse happened minutes after four Jersey Shore police officers were captured on came ...
March 5, 2026

Top