Tanzania blocks access to X

Tanzania's President Samia Suluhu Hassan walks during a visit at the Bogor palace in Bogor, West Java on January 25, 2024. (Photo by AFP)
Tanzania has blocked access to X, the
internet watchdog NetBlocks reported on Tuesday, hours after the country’s
police force’s account on the social media platform was hacked.
NetBlocks data showed that X was down
across Tanzania’s major internet service providers (ISPs) Halotel, Airtel, Liquid
Telecom, Habari Node, and Vodacom.
“Live metrics show X (formerly Twitter) has
become unreachable on major internet providers in Tanzania; the incident comes
as a compromised police account posts claims [sic] the President has died,
angering the country's leadership,” the London-based internet freedom monitor
said in a Mastodon update some minutes past 9 p.m. EAT.
The Tanzania Police Force X handle (@tanpol) was compromised early Tuesday and
began posting false information such as claims that President Samia Suluhu was
dead.
The account has over
470,000 followers and even held a live broadcast. Authorities later regained
control of the account and said they were pursuing the culprits.
The hack came amid the
ongoing uproar against President Suluhu’s administration after several East
African activists and lawyers were deported and others arrested after travelling
to the country to observe opposition leader Tundu
Lissu’s treason trial on Monday.
Kenyan activist and journalist Boniface
Mwangi and his Ugandan counterpart Agather Atuhaire were arrested in Dar es Salaam
by suspected military officers on Monday and their whereabouts remain unknown.
This is despite their Tanzanian lawyers being
informed the two were to be deported, according to the rights group Amnesty
International.
Their arrest followed
the detention and subsequent deportation of PLP Kenya leader and former Justice
Minister Martha Karua, former Chief Justice Willy Mutunga, Law Society of Kenya (LSK) Council member Gloria Kimani, as well as activists
Lynn Ngugi, Hanifa Adan, and Hussein Khalid.
They were detained upon landing at the Julius Nyerere International Airport in Dar
es Salaam on Sunday and Monday for Lissu’s case
hearing.
President Suluhu on Monday said foreign
activists would not be allowed to “interfere” in Tanzania's affairs.
"We have started to observe a trend in
which activists from within our region are attempting to intrude and interfere
in our affairs," she said in a televised speech during the launch of
the country’s new foreign policy.
Suluhu, whom critics accuse of taking Tanzania back to her authoritarian predecessor John Magufuli’s times, urged security and defence organs “not to allow ill-mannered individuals
from other countries to cross the line here."
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