Deutsche Welle, 3 April 2014
The
two-week old Twitter ban in Turkey has been lifted and access to the website
has been restored. The move follows a constitutional court ruling that the ban
breached freedom of expression.
Turkey's
TIB telecommunications authority removed the ban on Thursday just one day after
the country's top court outlawed the ban, saying it violated freedom of
expression and individual rights. The Turkish authorities had appealed an
initial ruling at a lower court, sending it to the constitutional court.
The
government sought to block the micro-blogging site on March 21 after Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan spoke critically of the site at an election
campaign rally. Twitter had become a popular vehicle for sharing a stream of
leaked wiretapped recordings of senior officials. One of the recordings
appeared to implicate Erdogan and his son in a corruption scandal, but Erdogan
said the recordings were fabricated.
Despite the
shutdown, most of the roughly 12 million Turkish Twitter users had found ways
to circumvent the attempted restrictions. One week after blocking Twitter, the
government also blocked the video portal YouTube, which remains offline in the country.
Both
restrictions came in the heat of a local election campaign; Turks voted on
March 31.
Sunday's
municipal elections cembented Erdogan's AKP (Justice and Development Party)
grip on power. The party marginally increased its overall share of the vote and
also retained control of the financial hub, Istanbul, and the capital, Ankara.
hc/msh (AFP, Reuters)

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