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Ethiopia Is Coming Back Online After Government Assassinations Prompted a 10-Day Internet Blackout

By
Elias Meseret
Elias Meseret
and
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
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By
Elias Meseret
Elias Meseret
and
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
Down Arrow Button Icon
July 2, 2019, 5:17 PM ET

Ethiopia has begun restoring Internet access Tuesday, 10 days after it was cut following the assassinations of six top government officials.

On June 22, attackers shot and killed the Amhara governor and two other officials. On the same night in Addis Ababa, the country’s army chief and his close friend, a retired army general, were assassinated inside his residence by his bodyguard.

The Internet was shut following the killings amid tightened security and a wave of arrests. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said the killings in Amhara were a coup attempt.

The Internet shutdown affected the entire country but in recent days a few locations were able to function.

“Internet has been restored in Addis Ababa today and it will be restored in other locations across the country as well, step by step,” Cherer Aklilu, secretary director of Ethio Telecom, told The Associated Press on Tuesday. “All Internet packages that users bought but were not able to use during the Internet cut will be reimbursed.”

Ethio Telecom, the country’s state-owned monopoly of telecommunications services, also cut Internet access two weeks ago during national school exams.

NetBlocks, an Internet monitoring group, estimated Ethiopia lost a minimum of $4.5 million a day during the Internet cuts.

“The government should stop cutting the Internet whenever some security or exam issues pop up,” said Abinet Haregu, a businessman in the delivery business in Ethiopia. “This is a tactic that was tried and failed in the past.”

Internet clampdowns have become more frequent across Africa. Mauritania and Sudan have recently blocked Internet access in their countries. The shutdown in Mauritania was for a few days last week when the opposition planned to demonstrate against election results and Sudan cut Internet access amid the ongoing anti-government demonstrations.

In January Zimbabwe ordered a “total Internet shutdown” when violent protests over a dramatic fuel price increase resulted in a deadly crackdown.

Also in January Congo cut Internet service before a court declared the winner of its disputed election and Gabon shut off service during an attempted coup.

The global digital rights group Access Now reports that there were 21 shutdowns across Africa in 2018, up from 13 in 2017.

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By Elias Meseret
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By The Associated Press
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