Syrian
internet back after 19-hour blackout
The
internet in Syria appears to have returned after a nationwide
blackout knocked the country offline for more than 19 hours.
8
May, 2013
Monitoring
company Renesys noted signs of activity at around 14:30 GMT (17:30
local time) on Wednesday.
Local
state-run media had reported earlier that a "fault in optical
fibre cables" was to blame for the blackout.
However,
experts dismissed this explanation as "unlikely".
David
Belson, of Akamai, said: "Our monitoring shows that Syria's
international internet connectivity is through at least four
providers, and published submarine cable maps show connectivity
through three active cables.
"As
such, the failure of a single optical cable is unlikely to cause a
complete internet outage for the country."
Syria
last experienced a shutdown for three days last November. Activists
say the regime of President Bashar al-Assad is attempting to
"silence" rebel communications.
Immediate
drop
The
Syrian government blamed that incident on "terrorists", but
internet experts said it was more likely that the regime had shut
down the web.
The
government has been fighting a bloody internal conflict for two
years.
Activists
suggested at the time of the previous internet shutdown that the
regime might have been planning a major offensive, or that it might
have been attempting to prevent rebels from using the internet to
co-ordinate themselves and communicate with the wider world.
However,
neither theory was substantiated.
US
web companies, including Renesys and Akamai, logged the latest
blackout late on Tuesday.
Google,
which monitors connections to its network of services, such as
YouTube and Gmail, also noted an
almost immediate drop on Tuesday
.
'Deliberate
attempt to silence'
Syrian
residents confirmed the blackout, but said mobile phones and
landlines were still able to work normally.
A
digital rights campaign group, the Electronic Frontier Foundation,
said the internet was a vital resource for activists in the country.
"We're
deeply concerned that this blackout is a deliberate attempt to
silence Syria's online communications and further draw a curtain over
grave events currently unfolding on the ground in Syria," it
said in a statement.
"While
heavily censored, monitored and compromised, the internet has served
as an important window connecting the world at large to Syria, and
one way that international observers could connect with individuals
on the ground in that country.
"A
number of activists on the ground in Syria have access to internet
via satellite links, which can connect them to the internet but
carries a high risk for detection, which can be life-threatening."
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