Uganda’s communications regulator has ordered internet service providers to shut down social media and messaging services, just two days before a tense presidential election.
In a letter
seen by news agencies on Tuesday, Uganda Communications Commission (UCC)
Executive Director Irene Sewankambo ordered telecommunications companies to
“immediately suspend any access and use” of social media and online messaging
platforms.
An industry
insider who spoke to AFP news agency on condition of anonymity said the order
was first communicated in “nasty and aggressive” phone calls to the
telecommunications companies on Tuesday morning. The calls made it clear the
order was retaliation for Facebook deleting pro-government accounts for seeking
to manipulate public debate before Thursday’s key polls.
The list of
banned social media sites include Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp, Signal and
Viber. Some of these were already offline on Tuesday.
On Monday, a
list of over 100 virtual private networks was distributed to internet service
providers by the UCC with orders to block them, according to the insider.
UCC spokesman
Ibrahim Bbosa told AFP: “I am not aware of a directive to switch off internet
or social media platforms.”
“There has
been slow connectivity on the platforms which can be partly due to heavy
traffic as a result of the forthcoming elections” he said.
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