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Artigo

25 Jun 2024

Author:
Annie Njanja, TechCrunch

Kenya: CSO reports Internet shutdowns amid protests over finance bill

"Internet goes dark in Kenya in the wake of major protests over finance bill", 25 June 2024

London-based internet rights monitoring group NetBlocks has reported a major internet disruption in Kenya following a wave of demonstrations across the country, as police violently cracked down on citizens taking to the streets to protest a government bill to hike taxes despite tough economic times and widespread corruption.

The interruption in access comes as the country’s ICT regulator, the Communications Authority, ...said it had no plans to shut down or interfere with the internet today.

The authority in the statement said it “had no intention whatsoever to shut down internet traffic or interfere with the quality of connectivity. Such actions would be a betrayal of the constitution as a whole, the freedom of expression in particular and our own ethos.”

Users have been reporting interrupted or slow internet connections, with NetBlocks confirming the outage also affected neighboring countries Uganda and Burundi.

There was also intermittent access to social media platforms such as X that have been instrumental in bringing protestors together.

Protestors have been using platforms such as X and TikTok to publicize their concerns over the high cost of living, taxation, unwarranted debt accumulation and the rampant misuse of public resources by the political class, among other issues.

Protestors also used social media to call for prudent use of public resources and to get the attention of political leaders. But unable to get leaders to listen, they have taken to the street to get their attention.

The protestors... then stormed the parliament moments after lawmakers voted to adopt the bill, resulting in several fatalities and scores of people with injuries. It was then that the internet started to fall over.

Safaricom said on X (formerly Twitter) that the interruption is due to problems with the subsea cable. However, others are reporting that Airtel is working, which would not be the case if the cable was down.

When reached for comment about what caused the outage, NetBlocks Director of Research Isik Mater said that it might be due to “unscheduled maintenance”:

We’ve been tracking those statements. We can look at two factors: the observed impact, and the observed timings.
Our observations do indicate that today’s disruption affects multiple countries. However, this outage has much higher impact to Kenya than past confirmed major subsea cable cuts including those earlier this year; we wouldn’t usually expect to see service collapse like this. Further, the other affected countries are downstream to Kenya, so likely affected by the situation in Kenya rather than the other way around.
Timings indicate that the outage occurred just around the moment protesters attempted to storm parliament in Nairobi and were met with live rounds by security forces. Together, these factors point to the possibility that an “unscheduled maintenance” cycle may have been deployed.