Turkey has blocked online encyclopedia
Wikipedia, the telecommunications watchdog said on Saturday, citing a law
allowing it to ban access to websites deemed obscene or
a threat to national
security.
The move is likely to further worry rights
groups and Turkey's Western allies, who say Ankara has sharply curtailed
freedom of speech and other basic rights in the crackdown that followed last
year's failed coup.
"After technical analysis and legal
consideration ... an administrative measure has been taken for this website
(Wikipedia.Org)," the BTK telecommunications watchdog said in a statement
on its website.
It cited a law that allows it to block access
to individual web pages or entire websites for the protection of public order,
national security or the well being of the public.
The watchdog is required to submit such
measures to a court within 24 hours. The court then has two days to decide
whether the ban should be upheld.
A block on all language editions of the
Wikipedia website was detected at 8:00 a.m. (1.00 a.m. ET) on Saturday,
monitoring group Turkey Blocks said on its website.
"The loss of availability is consistent
with internet filters used to censor content in the country," it said.
When attempting to access the webpage using
Turkish internet providers, users received a notice the site could not be
reached and a "connection timed out" error.
Monitoring groups have accused Turkey of
blocking access to social media sites such as Twitter or Facebook, particularly
in the aftermath of militant attacks.
The government has in the past denied blocking
access to some sites, blaming outages on spikes in usage after major events.
But technical experts at watchdog groups say the blackouts on social media are
intentional, aimed in part at stopping the spread of militant images and
propaganda.
Since last year's failed coup, authorities
have sacked or suspended more than 120,000 people from the civil service,
police and judiciary and arrested more than 40,000 on suspicion of ties to
terrorist groups.
President Tayyip Erdogan says the measures are
needed given the scope of the security threat Turkey faces.
Turkey last year jailed 81 journalists, making
it the world's top jailor of journalists, according to the New York-based
Committee to Protect Journalists.
0 Comments