Traffic to English and Arabic websites has plummeted since the network aired coverage of protests in August last year.
Last Modified: 18 Mar 2013 14:40
Traffic to English and Arabic websites has plummeted since the network aired coverage of protests in August last year.
Al Jazeera’s English and Arabic websites are reported to have been
blocked in Ethiopia, raising fresh fears that the government is
continuing its efforts to silence the media.
Though the authorities in Addis Ababa have refused to comment on the
reported censorship, Google Analytics data accessed by Al Jazeera shows
that traffic from Ethiopia to the English website had plummeted from
50,000 hits in July 2012 to just 114 in September.
Traffic data revealed a similar drop for the Arabic website, with
visits to the site dropping to 2 in September from 5,371 in July.
A blogger, who cannot be identified for his own safety, said
Ethiopian censors had been targeting Al Jazeera since the Qatar-based
network began airing coverage of ongoing protests against the way in
which spiritual leaders are elected in the Horn of African nation.
The steep decline in web traffic began on August 2 last year, the same day that Al Jazeera Mubasher aired a forumwith
guests denouncing the government’s “interference” with Muslim religious
affairs, and three days after Al Jazeera English published an article detailing deadly ethnic clashes between two of the country’s southern tribes.
Attempts by Al Jazeera to get an official response from authorities failed.
Poor track record
Ethiopia is ranked 137 out of 179 surveyed nations on the latest
Press Freedom Index of Reporters Without Borders (RSF), an international
advocacy group for press rights.
Both RSF and the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) have tied
Ethiopia’s deteriorating media environment, in part, to a 2009
anti-terrorism law that has been used to jail 11 journalists since its
ratification.
“The usage and practice of this law is illegal. It has a clause that
makes whoever writes about so-called terrorist groups, which are mostly
normal opposition groups, a terrorist,” CPJ’s East Africa Consultant
Thom Rhodes told Al Jazeera.
“Now it’s got to the point that the law is being used to label those
in the Muslim community conducting peaceful protests to defend their
right to choose their spiritual leaders as terrorists. It’s a sad state
of affairs.”
CPJ says Ethiopia is the second-highest jailer of journalists in
Africa after neighbouring Eritrea, were seven journalists are currently
detained.
Both the RSF and CPJ have expressed concern over reports that the
country has begun using much more sophisticated online censorship
systems over the last year, including ones that can identify specific
internet protocols and block them.
Since Ethiopia’s government owns the sole telecommunications provider
in the country, Ethio Telecom, it allows authorities to tightly control
internet freedom.
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