Wikipedia Is Turkey’s First Major Censorship Target, Post-Referendum. What Will Be Next? – Global Voices Online

Screenshot from Wikipedia's English-language page on Turkey.

Just two weeks after a referendum in which voters narrowly approved far-reaching constitutional amendmentsthat will increase thepower of the presidency, a Turkish court ruled that the volunteer-driven international online encyclopedia Wikipedia should be blocked in Turkey.

Amid growingtension between the pro and anti-government camps, the decision providedcitizens with yet anothersnapshotoftheir futureunder President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and hisruling AKP party as they adjust to growing political upheavaland theextension of emergency rule in the country by afurther three months.

Hurriyet Daily News reported that the website ban was ordered by an Ankara court on April 29 after the sites administration refused to remove two English language pages which claimed that Turkey channeled support to jihadists in Syria.

The Ministry of Transport, Maritime Affairs and Communications Ministry appeared to confirm this viewpoint when it saidthe site was blocked for becoming an information source with acting with groups conducting a smear campaign against Turkey in the international arena.

As a result, Turkey joined China as one of the fewcountriesin the world to order a complete block on Wikipedia, rather than simply censoring individual pages. The sledgehammer attack on the resourceechoes the zeal with which the government seemingly blocked Twitter after Erdogan promised to wipe out the social mediaservice in 2014.

According to aWikipedia pageon the topic of the website's censorship by countries across the world, previous censorship attempts by Turkey had only been partial, and apparently focused on Turkish-language articles about human genitalia.

The block comes at a time of deepening political schism in Turkey, after Erdogan lashed out against OSCE/ODIHR observers and their reports of vote fraud in the country's tightly contested referendum.

President Erdogan, Turkey's leadingpolitician for the last 14 years, publicly told themas well as other international actors and critics of the governmentto know your place.

The AKPgovernment's strong aversion to the Internet can be traced back at least as far as the Gezi park protestsin 2013 in which social networks helped mobilize opposition to the government in one of the first major tests of Erdogan's enduring leadership.

Just months later, they had reason to hate it some more after recordings allegedly capturing Erdogan and his son discussing illicit financial schemes went viral across YouTube and Twitter, triggering the Turkish leader's now infamousbroadside against the micro-blogging service Twitter.

Turkey has blocked bothYouTube andTwitterin the past, the latter onmultiple occasions. According to EngelliWeb (a platform no longer available online that tracked websites blocked since 2006)there are over 100,000 blocked websites in Turkey today.

Internet speeds have slowed considerably, meanwhile, and are especially sluggish during anti-government rallies, counter-extremism operationsor elections, pointing to likelyinterference by state actors.

In November 2016, the government shut down the internet in the Kurdish-populated south-east of the country for 10 days.

Turkish netizens were quick to turn to Twitter to channel their frustrations with the court decision blocking Wikipedia.

World's most heavily used information source Wikipedia blocked in Turkey. Whats the aim, to stay uninformed?

I have been banned. I have been in hiding all the time. Good morning, I am leaving (play on the words of a popular pop song)

The darkness that blocked Wikipedia

Wikipedia blocked, marriage TV shows shut down. Even Hames Harden would not have been able to do all these blogs.

The marriage programs mentioned in this tweet refer to acourt orderalso on April 29 that blocked reality dating programs which are popular in Turkey, citing these TV shows as unfitfor Turkish traditions and customs.

On the same day,another 3,900 peoplewere dismissed from their jobs, including more than 400 academics for alleged ties to Erdogan's arch-nemesis Fethullah Gulen, who Ankara accuses of engineering a bloody coup attempt in the country last year.

Since the coup took place 120,000 people have been sacked from both public and private sector jobs, and as many as 40,000 arrested, mostly on the basis of suspectedaffiliations to Gulen, an Islamic preacher and educator thatonce wielded formidable behind-the-scenes influence in Turkey.

The fact that Erdogan's Yes campaign secured51.41% of the vote indicates that a large part of the country is supportive of what amounts to a giant social engineering project to permanently change the face of the Turkish republic.

For the 48.59% who votedNo, cue disillusion, alienation and a world in which circumvention tools are needed to access the internet's largest, crowd-sourced educational resource.

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Wikipedia Is Turkey's First Major Censorship Target, Post-Referendum. What Will Be Next? - Global Voices Online

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