Pressure on the press authorities to back down has grown, with the protests including a petition that aims to amass 10,000 signatures against censorship, 4,000 of which have already been collected. Activists have also flooded internet websites and networks with photos and videos.
Young activists
One of the most novel campaigns calls itself Sayyeb Sala7. It started on Facebook and Twitter before establishing its own website and managing to gather 6,500 participants and attract a group of young activists to administrate and promote it.
One of the supervisors of Seyyeb Saleh - who wishes to remain anonymous - spoke to Radio Netherlands Worldwide's Arabic Service and explained that the term Seyyeb Saleh is a traditional expletive in Tunisian dialect, meaning "give me my freedom".
"Our initiative was spontaneous, but was ready to come out one day especially after the recent fierce attack by Tunisian censorship on internet websites."
The campaign has encouraged internet users to overcome the barrier of fear and even show their faces to express their protest. The website ammar405, which was blocked a few hours after its appearance, featured protestors disclosing their names and surnames in an attempt to mock or even provoke the Tunisian censor.
Cooking websites
Lina Ben Mehenna, a professor at Tunisia's April 9 University (named after the popular uprising of 1938), had her personal blog blocked twice. She is now a part of the protest campaign. She told Radio Netherlands Worldwide's Arabic Service:
"Past campaigns against censorship were mainly sponsored by elite politicians and rights activists as the blocking was mainly directed at political and news websites, but it has now moved to websites that have nothing to do with politics, including photo, video, and music sharing websites, cooking websites, and even those dealing with arts and theatre."
Moez al-Bay, a journalist at Kalema Radio, says that the blocking of sites that provided a means of expression to young internet users has encouraged them to join the campaign against censorship aimed at normal internet users rather than opposition politicians.
Court order
Moez al-Bay told Radio Netherlands Worldwide's Arabic Service,
"Most countries practise censorship on the internet, but the difference is that the Tunisian censor works undercover, although blocking is only supposed to be authorised via a court order. The government never admits such censorship, while allocating huge sums to practise censorship and equally huge sums to evade any legal responsibility of such practices."
Blogger Lina Mehenna adds, "In many cases, citizens turned to the courts to fight for their rights after being affected by censorship. But the Tunisian judiciary has never shown itself to be impartial on the issue. It has always come down on the side of the censor, the Tunisian Internet Agency, and up to now has ever done justice to any claimant."
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