Yemen: Renewed concern about online censorship after authorities block access to opposition site



Press release RSF
5 March 2007

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) voiced concern today about growing
political censorship of the Internet in Yemen after the authorities
blocked access to the opposition website www.al-shora.net on 24 February.
The site regularly carries articles about corruption, human rights and the
need for political and cultural reforms. Several websites and chat forums
were temporarily blocked during last September’s presidential
elections.

"The government is increasingly resorting to the filtering of online
content to prevent opposition political currents from disseminating their
ideas," Reporters Without Borders said. "As most newspapers and all the
radio and TV stations are already controlled by the authorities, censuring
the Internet has naturally become a priority for the government."

Abdul Karim Khaiwani, who edits the Al-Shura website and a weekly
newspaper of the same name, is often harassed by the authorities. He was
sentenced to a year in prison in September 2004 for supporting an uprising
by Shiite leader Badr Eddin al-Hawthi and for libelling President Ali
Abdallah Saleh. Freed under a presidential pardon in March 2005, he is
still closely watched by the authorities.

Access to several Yemeni websites and chat forums were blocked by the
ministry of telecommunications and information in the run-up to last
September's presidential and local elections. The Yemeni Council site
(www.al-yemen.org) and the Yemen Sound site (www.yemen-sound.com), two
chat forums popular with young people, were among those blocked at the end
of August.

The site www.hewarye.com, which was well known for supporting the
president in the past, was blocked by the ministry a few weeks later
without any explanation being given to those who run it. The same day, the
chat forum www.mostakela.com, which then had 1,450 members, was also
blocked. And a news site, www.nasspress.com, was temporarily banned on the
grounds that its coverage of the presidential election was not
satisfactory. Its was not unblocked until 24 September, after President
Ali Abdullah Saleh had been reelected.





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