Google – AFP, 24 March 2014
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Protesters
demonstrate against the ban on Twitter in Ankara on March 22,
2014 (AFP/File,
Adem Altan)
|
Washington
— The United States on Monday noted there have been more Turkish tweets since
the prime minister controversially banned the micro-blogging service than
before.
Turkey's
telecommunications authority blocked local access to the US social network Thursday
under orders of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, after opposition members used the social
network to post telephone recordings implicating him in a major corruption
scandal.
The move
has attracted ire from the international community, with Washington on Friday
denouncing the blow to "the right to free speech."
But State
Department spokeswoman Marie Harf noted Monday that "there have been more
tweets from Turkey since the government blocked (Twitter) than there were
before."
"Which
is an interesting, I think, signal to people who try to clamp down on freedom
of expression: that it doesn't work, and isn't the right thing to do," she
said.
"What
the world saw was the number of people inside Turkey tweeting about what they
thought about it being blocked there," Harf continued, as she also
reiterated her government's condemnation of the ban.
The United
States "said very clearly to the Turkish government that this is not
acceptable and that we do not think they should be able to block their
citizens' access to these kind of social media platforms," Harf said.
The
spokeswoman noted that the US government was also "in contact with
Twitter," but did not say if the United States would go to court to force
Turkey to restore access to the service.
Washington
and Ankara have a long-standing military alliance, including through NATO, and
the two countries work together closely to support the opposition and the
rebellion in Syria.
But
relations have chilled in recent months as the United States has increasingly
criticized the government's record on respecting civil liberties and human
rights under Erdogan.

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