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    HomeAfricaGabon suspends social media, citing threats to security and stability

    Gabon suspends social media, citing threats to security and stability

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    LIBREVILLE, Feb 18 (Reuters) - Gabon ‌has suspended some social media platforms, citing concerns that ​posts could undermine social cohesion and threaten the stability of institutions and national security, the Central ⁠African country's media regulator said in a statement.

    The High Authority for Communication ordered the immediate suspension "until further notice," without specifying which platforms were affected.

    Internet monitoring ​group NetBlocks said on Wednesday that access to Meta services, YouTube and TikTok was now ‌restricted in Gabon. A Reuters witness reported that Facebook, Instagram and X remained accessible as of Wednesday afternoon.

    Digital platforms and activists are violating Gabonese law by ⁠spreading "inappropriate, defamatory, hateful and abusive" content online, the HAC said late ⁠Tuesday. 

    Reuters could not determine whether a specific post or series of posts had triggered the decision. A government spokesperson could not immediately be reached.

    The suspension "amounts to paralysing a significant part of the country's economic and social activity in ‌a context already marked by unemployment and the cost of living," said civil ⁠society member Nicaise Moulombi.

    "Social networks are no longer ‌mere tools for entertainment, they have become instruments ​of work, citizen expression, commerce, innovation, and even democratic mobilization," Moulombi said.

    Gabon's president, Brice Oligui Nguema, was elected in April last year, cementing his grip ‌on power after he led a coup in August ​2023 that ended more than ⁠half a century of rule by former president Ali Bongo and ‌his family. 

    The oil-producing nation is grappling ⁠with debt as it faces an acute liquidity squeeze that has left it increasingly reliant on regional capital markets.

    The population of around 2.5 million across the heavily ​forested country is poor ‌and highly dependent on food imports.

    The World Bank has warned that despite the ⁠recent political transition and reform momentum, Gabon's ​fiscal position remains fragile.

    (Reporting by Gerauds Wilfried Obangome. Writing by Ayen ​Deng Bior. Editing by Mark Potter)

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