Africa's second most-populous country turned
off its internet access without warning or explanation last week,
briefly depriving even diplomatic buildings, like the UN's Economic
Commission for Africa and the headquarters of the African Union, of
internet access.
While service to those
two institutions was restored and subscribers to broadband internet say
they are now able to get online, access via mobile data -- which is most
used by businesses and individuals -- was still unavailable.
This is despite government assurances that the blockage had been lifted.
In
a press conference on Monday, Communications Minister Negeri Lencho
said the internet had been "partly" shut down for three days last week
and that social media sites were the only services that remained
blocked.
Negeri said the shutdown was a measure necessary to keep students taking annual exams away from distractions on social media.
"The only reason is to help our students to concentrate on the exams because we know we are fighting poverty," Negeri said.
Ethiopia's
sole telecommunications provider has blocked social media websites like
Facebook and Twitter since anti-government protests broke out last
year.
The country is among the
least-connected in Africa, with only about 12 percent of people online,
the International Telecommunications Union reported in 2015.
The
Brookings Institution think tank released a report last October saying
the country only lost around $8.5 million (7.5 million euros) when
internet access was cut off for weeks during last year's unrest.
"People
invest a lot of money in China, where the internet is already very
difficult," John Ashbourne, Africa economist a London-based Capital
Economics told AFP. "These are not insurmountable problems, but they're
frustrations."
The internet cafe where
Abiy Tesfaye works in Addis Ababa's busy Piazza neighbourhood runs off
mobile data and only one customer was using one of his 14 computers.
The
business has been suffering for years as more and more people browse
the internet with smartphones, Abiy said, and the internet shutdown was
the latest blow.
"We lose money, we don't have the customers. It's a shame," he said.
Around
the corner, Dereje Alemayehu Nida's cafe was doing a brisk business in
people filling out visa applications and surfing Facebook, but that's
only because his broadband internet access came back online over the
weekend after days without connectivity.
"It would have been better if they used another means to control the exams rather than shut down the internet," Dereje said.
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