Anonymous
declares #OpTurkey, attacks govt websites in support of protests
RT,
2 May, 2013
The
hacktivist group Anonymous have taken down the Turkish President’s
website, along with that of the country’s ruling party, as
operation #OpTurkey kicks off in support of the anti-government
protests that have entered their fourth day.
The
hacktivists earlier targeted municipal governments in Mersin and
Izmir.
The
operation was kicked off in response to the police crackdown of
protests which have taken the country by storm. The Gebze Institute
of Technology has also come under digital fire.
Following
the rumors that the government limited access to the Internet
Anonymous has started tweeting passwords to free access to a VPN –
virtual private network that connects computers and devices in one
network, allowing information to be shared.
The
hacktivist group also claimed that pro-government hackers are
attacking Turkish news websites.
Decrying
the reaction of Turkish authorities to the ongoing protests as those
of a “petty
dictator,”
Anonymous vows to kick off a worldwide action which will “bring
the Turkish government to its knees.”
With
#opTurkey, the hacktivist collective plans to “attack
every Internet and communications asset of the Turkish government.”
“You
have censored social media and other communications of your people in
order to suppress the knowledge of your crimes against them,"
the collective alleges. "Now
Anonymous will shut you down and your own people will warn you from
power.”
Although
rumors that the Turkish authorities have been blocking Twitter,
Facebook and other social media outlets throughout the country since
Saturday remain unconfirmed, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan made
no effort to hide his disaffection for the communication medium.
Turkey's
PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan has lashed out at the role of social media in
helping organize and co-ordinate rallies, after the wave of
large-scale protests that gripped the country.
"There
is now a menace which is called Twitter,"
Erdogan said in an interview for Haberturk Sunday evening. "The
best examples of lies can be found there. To me, social media is the
worst menace to society."
Turkey
has been gripped with mass demonstrations for the past three days.
The ongoing rallies started with protests on Friday against the
refurbishment of Istanbul’s Taksim Square, where the authorities
plan to build a shopping center in place of a park. However,
the protests unfolded into anti-government demonstrations with
thousands gathering all over the country. Riot police used ‘excessive
force,’ officials admitted, to disperse the crowds with tear gas
and water cannon. There have been about 1700 people reportedly
arrested.
Meanwhile, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on
Sunday stressed he “will
not seek permission from marauders”
to implement his building plans. He is also reported to have called
the social network Twitter ‘a trouble maker’, according to local
media, blaming it for misinforming people.
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