Sri Lanka Blocks Facebook, WhatsApp After Easter Bombings Leave Hundreds Dead

Sri Lanka Blocks Facebook, WhatsApp After Easter Bombings Leave Hundreds Dead

After at least 207 people were killed and over four hundred more were reported wounded after a series of bombs went off at Easter services in Sri Lanka, the Sri Lankan government has moved to block access to Facebook, TechCrunch reported on Sunday.

In a brief statement, presidential secretary Udaya Seneviratne said that the government has “decided to temporarily block social media sites including Facebook and Instagram” to combat “false news reports,” and that services would return after investigations had finished.

Various reports suggested that both Facebook and its subsidiary WhatsApp were affected by the outage, though some users reported still being able to connect to WhatsApp, TechCrunch wrote. According to the Washington Post, some people in the country also said they were unable to access Instagram (another Facebook-owned property) and YouTube.

In a statement to TechCrunch, Facebook wrote that it was aware of the ban and stated that it was “committed to maintaining our services and helping the community and the country during this tragic time”:

Our hearts go out to the victims, their families and the community affected by this horrendous act. Teams from across Facebook have been working to support first responders and law enforcement as well as to identify and remove content which violates our standards.

We are aware of the government’s statement regarding the temporary blocking of social media platforms. People rely on our services to communicate with their loved ones and we are committed to maintaining our services and helping the community and the country during this tragic time.

This is not the first time the Sri Lankan government has ordered Facebook shut down. In March 2018, authorities there ordered internet and mobile service providers to block Facebook and its subsidiaries, as well as messaging app Viber, after members of the majority Sinhalese ethnic group were reported to have launched deadly mob attacks against Muslims in Kandy district.

Sri Lankan government officials and human rights activists said Facebook had done little to rein in rampant misinformation, hate speech, and propaganda circulating on the service, with Sinhalese nationalist groups reportedly using the platforms to scapegoat and spread rumours about the minority Muslim population.

Shortly after that incident, the New York Times published a bombshell report indicating that despite serving as the de facto primary portal to the internet for many Sri Lankans, Facebook had made little effort to police the service. The Times wrote:

Time and again, communal hatreds overrun the newsfeed—the primary portal for news and information for many users—unchecked as local media are displaced by Facebook and governments find themselves with little leverage over the company. Some users, energised by hate speech and misinformation, plot real-world attacks.

A reconstruction of Sri Lanka’s descent into violence, based on interviews with officials, victims and ordinary users caught up in online anger, found that Facebook’s newsfeed played a central role in nearly every step from rumour to killing. Facebook officials, they say, ignored repeated warnings of the potential for violence, resisting pressure to hire moderators or establish emergency points of contact.

In one incident, the Times wrote, a mob in the town of Ampara beat a man named Atham-Lebbe Farsith at a Muslim-owned restaurant after a patron became convinced a sterilisation pill had been added to his food — a vicious and unfounded rumour about Muslims he had probably originally seen on Facebook.

Facebook has also been accused of enabling genocide in Myanmar and fuelling mob violence in rural Indonesia.

As the New York Times noted, this block is different than the previous incident because it seems to be pre-emptive, with the government “treating the platforms as too dangerous to remain online.”

Some false information, including a rumour the Sri Lanka Red Cross had been targeted, was reported to be circulating on social media.

The Sri Lankan government has named the suspects in the Easter bombings as religious extremists, according to the Guardian, and has arrested at least 13 people. In addition to the social media blackout, a mandatory curfew is in effect.

The Times reported that a radical Islamic group, National Thowheeth Jama’ath, had issued a threat against churches 10 days ago, but it was not clear whether the government took precautions in relation to the threat or whether the group was behind the bombings.

“We believe these were coordinated attacks, and one group was behind them,” Defence Minister Ruwan Wijewardene said, according to the Times. At least three police officers were killed during a raid in Dematagoda, a suburb of Colombo, after a gun battle broke out with suspects; one detonated explosives while under questioning, the Times wrote.

The attacks are unprecedented, even given the devastating effects of the 1983-2009 Sri Lanka Civil War between the military and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, a militant Tamil separatist group.

“In three decades of war, this scale of attack has never happened,” Human Rights Watch South Asian director Meenakshi Ganguly told the Times. “In terms of serious, religion-based violence, we haven’t really seen that.

[TechCrunch]


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