(Thursday 26 April 2012, Reporters Without Borders)--Reporters Without Borders is very worried to learn that
access to the Amharic website of Ethiopia’s leading independent,
privately-owned weekly, The Reporter,
has been blocked for the past five days. No one has been able to access
the site from within Ethiopia since around 4:30 p.m. on 21 April unless
they use a proxy server.
.
“Website blocking is not new in Ethiopia but a leading
independent newspaper’s site has never previously been affected,”
Reporters Without Borders said. “Tests carried out by the OpenNet Initiative
in 2008 and 2009 showed that certain outspoken or opposition sites
based abroad were the target of filtering, but this is the first time a
newspaper such as The Reporter has been targeted.”
The Reporter’s site normally has upward of 30,000 visitors a day, more than five times the number of readers of the print version. “Has The Reporter’s site been blocked to prevent the dissemination of sensitive articles,” Reporters Without Borders asked. Reporters Without Borders urges the authorities to
restore access to the site for Ethiopian Internet users and reiterates
its opposition to the filtering and blocking of online content.
Its view is shared by of the United Nations special
rapporteur for freedom of opinion and expression, Frank La Rue, who
recommended in a June 2011 report
that the flow of information online should be restricted to “few,
exceptional, and limited circumstances prescribed by international human
rights law.” He also said “the right to freedom of expression must be
the norm, and any limitation considered as an exception.”
Source: Reporters Without Borders
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