Social media blocked as Liberians protest 'corruption and creeping dictatorship'

beth

JF-Expert Member
Aug 19, 2012
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Thousands of Liberians gathered in the capital Monrovia Friday to protest "corruption and creeping dictatorship" in the country.

Social media sites were later blocked to quell the protests, according to the internet monitoring platform NetBlocks.

WhatsApp, Instagram, Snapchat, Facebook, Google's Gmail service and the website of The Associated Press were among the sites affected, NetBlocks said

Bai Sama G. Best, managing director of Liberia's Daily Observer newspaper, told CNN most journalists and some citizens are using virtual private networks (VPN) to bypass the restrictions.

Liberia's Minister of Information Eugene Nagbe confirmed that social media platforms were shutdown temporarily because of "security concerns."

"We have restored some of them," he said. "We are not saying that the protesters were carrying out things detrimental to the nation, but the national security apparatus said there were threats to the country and the services were temporarily disrupted and have been restored."

The protests were organized by a group called the Council of Patriots, which says it is a conglomeration of citizens, civil society activists, youth workers and major political parties.

Protesters presented a petition to delegates from the government of President George Weah, who has been in office for just over one year.

The document stated that Liberians are suffering "harsh economic conditions being caused ... and encouraged by bad governance, deliberate and wanton collapse of integrity systems..."

"We have come to say no to bad governance, abuse of power, corruption and creeping dictatorship," said Henry Costa, one of the leader of the protesters, via a WhatsApp message to CNN.

Nagbe told CNN that Weah inherited a "dire economic situation," and accused the country's opposition of driving the protests.

"Mr. President is working to restore some of the issues that he inherited," he said. "The opposition is now using the streets to get what they didn't get at the ballot box."

Weah, a former football star who was named FIFA's World Player of the Year in 1995, took over in 2018 from Africa's first female president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, in Liberia's first democratic transfer of power since 1944.

The West African nation of 4.8 million people has been ravaged by civil war, the Ebola virus and corruption.
 
African leaders are corrupt.. Shame on them, If I could have been in Weah's shoes
I'coudve stepped ...
Peacefully
 
Hawa jamaa wajinga sana. Kwanza jamaa ndo ana mwaka ofisini, mnataka afanye miujiza gani ghafla muwe kama NY? Hata mbuyu ulianza kama mchicha.
Watu wenyewe wako 4.8m - yaani chini ya population ya Dar - nawaza kwa sauti tu - wakichinjana tena hawa, watabaki 900k
 
Mwanasoka amefeli hata mwaka hajafikisha

Niliposkia tu Rais analipa wachezaji wa timu ya taifa mishahara nikajua Hamna kitu hapo
 
Watu hudhani kuwa pesa ni kila kitu, hata kumwezesha mcheza mpira mwenye pesa kutawala hata kama uwezo hana! African leaderz...!
Uongozi cyo kujaribu. Nawapongeza wao kwakuwa baada ya kuona maisha ni magumu, wamechukua hatua.
 
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