What's new

Welcome

If you already have an account, please login, but if you don't have one yet, you are more than welcome to freely join the community of lawyers around the world..

Register Log in
  • We don't have any responsibilities about the news being sent in this site. Legal News are automatically being collected from sources and submitted in this forum by feed readers. Source of each news is set in the news and a link to its source is always added.
    (Any News older than 21 days from its post time will be deleted automatically!)

Jurist Sudan court orders end to internet shutdown

Status
Not open for further replies.
  • Thread starter
  • Staff
  • #1

Dadparvar

Staff member
Nov 11, 2016
10,601
0
6
The Khartoum District Court has ordered the country’s three main telecommunication providers—Zain, MTN and Sudani—to restore internet services immediately, after more than two weeks of internet shutdown following a coup by military leaders, according to Reuters.

In the early hours of October 25, Sudan’s military dissolved the government and the Sovereign Council, a joint military and civilian body created after al-Bashir’s ouster. Senior officials were subsequently detained and Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok was placed under house arrest. The head of the military, General Abdel-Fattah Burhan, declared a country-wide state of emergency and announced that the military would appoint a technocratic government to run the country until elections are conducted in July 2023. He clarified that he will not be contesting in the said elections. While the military has now released several civilian leaders, the prime minister remains in detention.

Adam Rojal, a spokesman for the Coordinating Committee for Refugees and Displaced People, said that “[t]he lack of internet is allowing [the military] to commit so many violations without accountability. We used the internet to document and report and that would make them a little bit scared.” At least four people have been killed in more than 10 militia attacks across the country, with many more injured and sexually assaulted.

Internet watchdog NetBlocks has estimated that the total economic cost of the internet shutdown could be around $732 million, much more than the $700 million US aid suspended soon after the coup.

There have been no signs of internet service restoration since Tuesday’s order.



The post Sudan court orders end to internet shutdown appeared first on JURIST - News - Legal News & Commentary.

Continue reading...

Note: We don't have any responsibilities about this news. Its been posted here by Feed Reader and we had no controls and checking on it. And because News posted here will be deleted automatically after 21 days, threads are closed so that no one spend time to post and discuss here. You can always check the source and discuss in their site.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top