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Turkey

Turkey Blocking Access to Social Media After Assassination of Russian Ambassador

Assassination likely to lead to more government censorship.

Ed Krayewski | 12.20.2016 1:00 PM

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Large image on homepages | Depo Photos/ZUMA Press/Newscom
(Depo Photos/ZUMA Press/Newscom)
Depo Photos/ZUMA Press/Newscom

The Turkish government appears to be blocking access to social media networks and messaging apps like Facebook, Twitter, and WhatsApp in the aftermath of the assassination of the Russian ambassador to Turkey, Turkey Block reports.

The monitoring network says it had detected "severe slowdowns affecting Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and WhatsApp for some, but not all, internet users in Turkey" between last night and this morning. As The Telegraph notes, it's not the first time the censor-happy government of Turkey has restricted access to social media following an incident.

The Turkish government had already recently banned the use of Tor and other virtual private networks, which allow internet users a measure of privacy, and, according to The USB Port, deployed sophisticated blocking tools to prevent the use of VPNs. "All these stringent measures could make Turkey's digital world resemble China's regulations," The USB Port's Angel Diaz writes.

The government of Turkey has been working to improve its ability to censor information on the internet for years, using any excuse, from mass arrests to attempted to coups, to crack down on internet use. After the coup earlier this year, the Turkish government dismissed the European Union's "red line" on freedom of the press, cracking down on opposition outlets and tightening its control over media.

The assassination of Andrey Karlov is far more likely to spur even more censorship in Turkey than it is to harm Russian-Turkish relations, despite the hot takes yesterday suggesting the latter was a real possibility. Leaders of Turkey and Russia both insisted they would not allow the assassination to sour relations. Instead, the Turkish government is already attempting to pin Karlov's assassination on Fetullah Gulen, a Turkish cleric living in exile in the United States, whom the Turkish government already blamed for the attempted coup earlier this year and against whose supporters it has already begun to crack down. Gulen has rejected both allegations.

Karlov's assassin, meanwhile, was identified as 22-year-old Mevlut Altinas, a riot cop from Ankara. A number of his family members have been arrested as the government begins its investigation into the assassination. Karlov often eschewed security measures, and had no security officers by his side at the event yesterday nor, reportedly, where there any on-duty police officers there.

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Ed Krayewski is a former associate editor at Reason.

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  1. Charles Easterly   8 years ago

    A Turkey ban at this time of year?

    The U.S. hardest hit.

    1. LynchPin1477   8 years ago

      I prefer to not do Turkey for Christmas, since I always do it for Thanksgiving. Instead we have done ham, pork loin, game hens, goose, duck, prime rib, and lobster tails.

  2. John   8 years ago

    This is kind of bad but I saw the picture of the assassin in the suit holding the gun in that art museum and all I could think is that he looked like Casey Afflack in the filmed bun used unhappy ending to Oceans 11.

    1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   8 years ago

      Yeah, someone had some balls to be standing that close to him snapping photos as two bodies lay on the floor surrounded by shell casings.

      1. John   8 years ago

        I hadn't thought of that, but that is a good point. Who the fuck takes out their camera in that situation? Either run, stand still hoping he doesn't shoot you, or take your chances and go for the gun. But i can't for the life of me imagine taking pictures. We live in really strange times.

        1. kinnath   8 years ago

          Professional photographer happened to step into the galleria before the shooting started. Decided to do his job instead of protecting himself. Not exactly rational, but ballsy none the less.

          1. kinnath   8 years ago

            http://www.slate.com/blogs/the.....assin.html

            When 22-year-old Turkish policeman Mevlut Altintas stepped out from the crowd and gunned down Russia's ambassador to Turkey Andrei Karlov at close range in Ankara Monday evening, spectators scrambled and fled for their lives, but Associated Press photographer Burhan Ozbilici calmed himself and in an astounding moment of seemingly casual bravery, grabbed his camera, raised it, and pointed it back at the assassin. The results are gripping, terrifying images taken at arm's length of an assassination.

            Ozbilici said he stopped by the exhibition opening only because it was on his way home from work and recounted how he thought the man on stage brandishing a gun was a "theatrical flourish" until the shooting started.

            1. R C Dean   8 years ago

              Just give him all the awards for press photography, right now.

          2. Rufus The Monocled   8 years ago

            It means they're meant to do that job I reckon.

        2. tarran   8 years ago

          I think the cameras were set up beforehand: there were reporters there covering his speech. In fact, I think he was giving his speech when the assassin made his move.

        3. Pan Zagloba "The Stickler"   8 years ago

          Who the fuck takes out their camera in that situation

          This guy

          Ozbilici wrote: "People screamed, hid behind columns and under tables and lay on the floor. I was afraid and confused, but found partial cover behind a wall and did my job: taking photographs."
          He said he recognised the danger of moving towards the gunman as others ran away, but he felt he had to capture the scene.

          Turks are badasses, even if it comes out in ways that might look weird when considered rationally.

        4. You ARE a Prog (MJG)   8 years ago

          Photographers take out their cameras. That's what they do. Especially if they've already been in the shit; their impulse to start snapping may now dominate the impulse to protect themselves.

  3. Libertarian   8 years ago

    "Assassination likely to lead to more government censorship."

    True. But in all fairness to President Erdo?an, the lack of assassinations would have also led to more government censorship.

    1. Hyperion   8 years ago

      Yeah, I think they were pretty hard at work on that already.

  4. Hyperion   8 years ago

    Well, that will certainly show them ordinary folks trying to serf some pr0n terrorists.

  5. John   8 years ago

    Wasn't this guy a police officer or some member of law enforcement? How riddled with Islamic nutcases are the Turkish police forces?

    1. JEP   8 years ago

      When I was in Turkey in 2009, my professor's wife was explaining all the social and political divisions...a woman's hair style would be a political signal, etc. She mentioned that the police department were all members of a certain political party and I remember thinking how strange it was (and a really bad sign) if your police department had a particular political affiliation.

      1. tarran   8 years ago

        You mean like when the cops' union keeps endorsing machine candidates from the a particular political party.

        1. John   8 years ago

          See e.g Chicago Illinois.

        2. JEP   8 years ago

          Yeah, but it's a little more explicit in Turkey.

          1. Social Signaling Hair   8 years ago

            it's not explicit in Chicago?

      2. Social Signaling Hair   8 years ago

        a woman's hair style would be a political signal, etc.

        You don't say.

      3. Social Signaling Hair   8 years ago

        the police department were all members of a certain political party

        So kinda like the U.S. then.

    2. Slumbrew   8 years ago

      ... 22-year-old Mevlut Altinas, a riot cop from Ankara.

      Jesus, people, at least skim the articles first.

  6. Fist of Etiquette   8 years ago

    Probably afraid of fake news.

  7. GILMORE?   8 years ago

    a riot cop from Ankara

    I saw this yesterday. My thought was, "Riot Cops" are a thing distinct from 'regular old cops'? I guess they have a lot of riots.

    1. Princess Trigger   8 years ago

      A number of countries do this. It's kind of a place where they can warehouse unemployed 18-30 year old men. They sit around and wait for shit to go down. Often their conscripts. You get choice of a harder basic training in the Army or lighter training and getting spit on by college students and dodging molotovs thrown by striking workers.

      1. GILMORE?   8 years ago

        Makes sense. "Crowd control"

  8. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   8 years ago

    No Twitter in Turkey? No Takei in Turkey? No Instagram for the Ottomans?

    1. Citizen X   8 years ago

      That's nobody's business but the Turks'!

      1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   8 years ago

        Young Turks hardest hit!

        1. PBR Streetgang   8 years ago

          + 10 pound baby boy

        2. Pan Zagloba "The Stickler"   8 years ago

          Don't tell them, they are still having trouble adjusting to Trump victory.

        3. Juvenile Bluster   8 years ago

          Young Turks?

          Young hearts be free tonight. Time is on your side,
          Don't let them put you down, don't let 'em push you around,
          Don't let 'em ever change your point of view.

  9. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   8 years ago

    Karlov often eschewed security measures

    I bet he won't do that again!

  10. Ken Shultz   8 years ago

    I'd guess this isn't a reaction to the assassination as much as it's in anticipation of something the government is about to do. I believe they did the same thing before they went all raid happy after the recent coup attempt and threw thousands of people in prison for political reasons.

    In other words, they don't want the dissidents talking to each other during raids and crackdowns. If somebody knows their Facebook friends just got arrested, that's an excellent indication that they should go run and hide.

    We tend to see technology as a product of capitalist innovation and resistance to that as a bad thing. Technology is just a tool, and whether it's good or evil depends on how it's used. Radio made people in Great Britain more informed about current events than they'd ever been before. It also made the people of Germany more easily victimized by Nazi propaganda than they'd ever been before.

    "The Net Delusion: The Dark Side of Internet Freedom" by Evgeny Morozov should be a libertarian classic. The author was a dissident in Belarus, as I recall. Social media lets revolutionaries organize through the internet like never before, but it also lets authoritarian governments trace dissidents like they never could before.

    http://tinyurl.com/gr4k3lc

    If Facebook had set out to give authoritarian dictatorships a map to identify who was saying what to whom about the government, they could hardly have done a better job.

  11. LoriLam   8 years ago

    I Quit my office-job and now I am getting paid 99 USD hourly. How? I work over internet! My old work was making me miserable, so I was forced to try something different, 2 years after...I can say my life is changed-completely!

    Check it out what i do:===> http://www.NetNote70.com

    1. Swiss Servator   8 years ago

      Social media work in Anatolia?

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