As we reported recently, the Turkish government passed a law in early March to allow the Turkish
Telecommunication Authority (TIB) to block access to designated websites within 4
hours of the initial request. The
country’s most prominent critic of social media, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, championed the law as he decried social media a menace.
Erdogan recently elicited a firestorm of activity within
Turkey and across the world when he ordered TIB to block access to Twitter
across the country on March 20. He was
apparently following through on a promise he made during a political rally
earlier that day, assuring supporters that he would eradicate social media from
the country, including Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube.
The events unfolding in Turkey over the past several weeks
and months act as reminders of how grave the consequences are when we allow
freedom of expression to be threatened. Regardless if you have been following the
story or not, we can all be reminded of the following three lessons:
1. Destructive laws have
consequences; President Gul underestimated that reality.
President Abdullah Gul, who approved the recent law
attacking freedom of expression, publicly condemned Erdogan’s actions, calling the Twitter shutdown “unacceptable.” He railed
against the Prime Minister, saying that the law only protects instances in which
websites were violating privacy, according to the BBC. For observers of the country’s march toward
such an impasse about freedom of expression, Gul’s surprise seemed
puzzling. How could he not have seen
what was coming in that law he approved, when the law’s detractors had so
clearly articulated its dangers? Gul and
other leaders distanced themselves from Erdogan’s actions, but it remains
unclear if there will be longer-term political ramifications for the polarizing
Prime Minister.
2. “Shutting down” social
media reinforced its power and omnipresence.
The Twitter shutdown inflamed Erdogan’s opposition and
generated international attention for the shutdown and the country’s largely problematic
privacy laws. Turkish internet users, more
savvy than the TIB, circumvented the Twitter “block” by using alternative means to communicate with each
other and the world. Almost immediately
after Erdogan’s orders were carried out by the Telecommunication Authority,
Twitter users across the world starting using the hashtag #TurkeyBlockedTwitter
(among other variations) to spread the word about Erdogan’s inflammatory
actions. Erodgan’s effort suffered at
the mercy of the very qualities of social media he vilified: Providing an
avenue to distribute sensitive information broadly and quickly organize
anti-government demonstrations. When President
Gul eventually declared his condemnation of the event, he did so on Twitter
first. Twitter itself offered support to
Turkish users by offering helpful tweets and then successfully filed petitions in Turkish court to challenge the blockage.
3. This story doesn't have an end, and Turkey’s hostile environment continues to worsen.
Just yesterday, the BBC reported that the Turkish government
has continued to increase its social media censorship efforts. Learning from their initial mistakes, the
Turkish government is instructing internet service providers (ISPs) to block access to domain name servers such as Google, Level 3, and OpenDNS, and redirect users away from
their desired destinations. Considering
Erdogan’s political party, Justice and Development Party (AK), performed well in this week’s local elections – elections he had personally framed as
a referendum on his rule – it does not appear Turkish citizens can expect these
restrictions to cease.
What are your thoughts on the recent events unfolding in Turkey? What other lessons can we learn from these developments?
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