Thursday, April 3, 2014

TURKEY FINALLY LIFT THEIR NATIONWIDE BAN ON TWITTER.

Turkey lifted a much-criticised block on Twitter
on Thursday, 24 hours after its highest court had overturned the
ban as a breach of the right to free speech.
Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan on March 20 shuttered access to
the social media site after it had been used to spread a torrent of
anonymous leaks implicating his inner circle in corruption.

Turkey’s NATO allies and international human rights groups
strongly criticised the ban — as well as an ongoing block of video-
sharing website YouTube — as a step backward for Turkey’s
democracy.
On Wednesday Turkey’s Constitutional Court ruled the Twitter ban
violated free speech and ordered the communications ministry and
telecoms authority to reverse it “with immediate effect”.
The government took 24 hours to react. First the telecoms
authority TIB removed from its website a court order on the
Twitter block and started contacting internet service providers to
lift the ban.
Shortly after — as many of Turkey’s Twitter accounts came live
again — the transport and communications ministry confirmed the
move in a brief statement.
“In line with the decision made by the Constitutional Court … the
measure blocking access to the Twitter.com internet site has been
removed,” it said. “After the necessary technical arrangements,
the site will be opened to use.”
The ban had been widely circumvented by many of Turkey’s
almost 12 million Twitter users, who have instead sent tweets via
text message or by adjusting their Internet settings.

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