> On 17 Oct 2023, at 12:31 pm, Michael Guggenheim via nettime-l 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I am deeply frustrated by the whole discussion. I am coming to Nettime 
> because I like to listen to a group of people who have expertise in 
> internet/tech/media, not for rehashing generic political discussions that I 
> can have in the news or on social media.


(thnx to vesna for finding it, geert)

https://www.accessnow.org/press-release/communications-blackout-gaza-strip/

#KeepItOn: Telecommunications blackout in the Gaza Strip is an attack on human 
rights
LAST UPDATED: 16 October 2023
People in Gaza continue to endure a communications and electricity blackout 
<https://twitter.com/matthewcassel/status/1713595973325242638> as they struggle 
to access a reliable internet. Residents have resorted to using car batteries 
<https://twitter.com/QudsNen/status/1713602357697691688> to charge their mobile 
devices and reach out to their loved ones.

With thousands of people already killed 
<https://twitter.com/spectatorindex/status/1713819665087238403>, and currently 
in a near-complete blackout, access to information has become scarce, directly 
impacting the capacity to document atrocities perpetrated on the ground. People 
find it nearly impossible to learn the whereabouts of their families and loved 
ones, and if they’re dead or alive.

“Hello world, this might be my last video as my phone battery is dying.”

Maha Hussaini (@MahaGaza <https://twitter.com/MahaGaza?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw>), 
Middle East Eye correspondent in Gaza, has a message to the world. 
pic.twitter.com/a1A5OXZfMD <https://t.co/a1A5OXZfMD>— Middle East Eye 
(@MiddleEastEye) October 12, 2023 
<https://twitter.com/MiddleEastEye/status/1712463960602243511>
Palestinians need access to the internet now more than ever. 

This blackout comes alongside Israeli military orders for more than a million 
people to evacuate 
<https://apnews.com/article/israel-palestinians-gaza-hamas-war-c8b4fc20e4fd2ef381d5edb7e9e8308c>
 from northern to southern Gaza, causing mass displacement and chaos in which 
access to communications is vital. There is clear evidence for the ways in 
which internet shutdowns create an air of impunity during armed conflicts and 
provide cover for grave human rights abuses. 
<https://www.accessnow.org/press-release/keepiton-internet-shutdowns-2022/> 
With a ground offensive into Gaza appearing imminent, people cannot be left in 
the dark. 

The international community must urgently intervene and do everything possible 
to #KeepItOn.

The Israeli government declared war on Sunday, October 8, in response to an 
assault by Hamas militants beginning Saturday, October 7. These escalations 
come in the context of Israel’s ongoing 16-year blockade in the occupied 
territory of Gaza, 56 years of military occupation, and decades of struggle for 
a just and sustainable peace in the region. Access Now calls on all parties to 
the conflict to respect international human rights and humanitarian law, and in 
particular to prioritize the safety of civilians. We are deeply concerned for 
all people who are suffering amidst this conflict, in which civilians across 
all sides have been targeted, killed, wounded, and displaced.

Access Now is a global organization with a mandate to defend human rights at 
their intersection with digital technologies. We issue the following release 
from the perspective of the #KeepItOn <https://www.accessnow.org/keepiton> 
campaign, focused specifically on bringing an end to internet shutdowns around 
the world, including in times of conflict.

People living in the Gaza Strip are under a “complete siege,” 
<https://twitter.com/SkyNews/status/1711382405964075219> cut off from supplies 
of fuel, food, water, medical provisions, and electricity 
<https://www.cnn.com/2023/10/10/middleeast/gaza-complete-siege-israel-intl/index.html>,
 and a near-complete communications blackout 
<https://twitter.com/MahaGaza/status/1711403345737367770>. 

The Gaza Strip is being cut off from the world. Access Now demands the 
immediate restoration of internet access for the people of Gaza, who have 
already long endured horrifying conditions in what is described as the world’s 
largest open-air prison, and who have little to no means of escape as the 
violence escalates. The total blockade now in place will only exacerbate the 
situation and may result in more atrocities for those plunged under the 
darkness of a communications blackout. Marwa Fatafta, MENA Policy and Advocacy 
Manager at Access Now.

Data from the Internet Outage Detection and Analysis (IODA) 
<https://ioda.inetintel.cc.gatech.edu/region/1226?from=1696550440&until=1696926520>
 shows a major connectivity dip in Gaza coinciding with the start of Israeli 
strikes on the Gaza Strip following Hamas’ assault on Israeli border towns on 
Saturday, October 8. Airstrikes by Israeli forces on Monday, October 9, 
destroyed a building 
<https://twitter.com/muhammadshehad2/status/1711408136806969624> containing 
both offices and infrastructure for Paltel and Jawwal 
<https://twitter.com/SaulStaniforth/status/1711647388241207374>, two of the 
main telecommunications providers in the Gaza Strip. Al–Watan Tower 
<https://twitter.com/AseelBM97/status/1710860051697532965>, another building 
that houses media offices 
<https://bnn.network/world/palestine/destruction-of-watan-tower-a-blow-to-press-freedom-or-a-military-necessity/>
 and serves as a hub for internet service providers, has also been the target 
of Israeli airstrikes. 

Other internet service providers including Fusion 
<https://ioda.inetintel.cc.gatech.edu/asn/42314?from=1696550440&until=1697099320>,
 Hadara 
<https://ioda.inetintel.cc.gatech.edu/region/1226?from=1696550425&until=1697152105>,
 and Jetnet <https://radar.cloudflare.com/as199046> have been impacted, with 
damage to infrastructure causing widespread outages 
<https://blog.cloudflare.com/internet-traffic-patterns-in-israel-and-palestine-following-the-october-2023-attacks/>
 in both internet and telephone line access. By Tuesday, October 10, reports 
<https://twitter.com/yumna_patel/status/1711511091618951254>indicated that 
fixed-line internet <https://twitter.com/fitnfuII/status/1710781663779619215>, 
mobile data, SMS, telephone 
<https://twitter.com/nour_odeh/status/1712066310706733120>, and TV networks are 
all seriously compromised. With significant and increasing damage 
<https://twitter.com/IamArwaDamon/status/1711616538585763955> to the electrical 
grid, orders by the Israeli Ministry of Energy 
<https://twitter.com/AdityaRajKaul/status/1710697489043738652> to stop 
supplying electricity to the Gaza Strip, and the last remaining power station 
now out of fuel 
<https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/oct/11/palestinians-in-gaza-fear-impact-of-siege-as-sole-power-plant-shuts-down>,
 many are no longer able to charge devices 
<https://twitter.com/MahaGaza/status/1711711331890467238> that are essential to 
communicate and access information. Even where intermittent connection may 
still be available, Israel’s long-standing ban on technology upgrades 
<https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/palestinians-eagerly-await-arrival-of-4g-cellular-service-678301>
 in Gaza means that people can only access slow, unreliable 2G service.

Together, these disruptions have left the people of Gaza with no meaningful 
remaining channels of communication to contact loved ones and share life-saving 
information while Israeli forces are deploying a barrage of bombings 
<https://twitter.com/MuhammadSmiry/status/1711432890918002698> across 
residential neighborhoods 
<https://twitter.com/EuroMedHR/status/1711615484892680248>, hospitals 
<https://edition.cnn.com/middleeast/live-news/israel-hamas-gaza-attack-10-09-23/h_6e59c097f6137e7ec3f8884b6cb1d5b0>,
 refugee camps 
<https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/10/9/we-will-never-be-safe-a-day-of-bombing-in-gazas-jabalia-refugee-camp>,
 and other civilian spaces 
<https://twitter.com/MiddleEastEye/status/1711554567895167009>.

The imposition of a complete siege and deliberate targeting of critical 
civilian infrastructure 
<https://ihl-databases.icrc.org/en/customary-ihl/v1/rule7>, including 
telecommunications 
<https://www.icrc.org/sites/default/files/wysiwyg/war-and-law/03_distinction-0.pdf>,
 as a collective punishment 
<https://guide-humanitarian-law.org/content/article/3/collective-punishment/> 
or retaliation 
<https://guide-humanitarian-law.org/content/article/3/reprisals/> is forbidden 
by customary international humanitarian law and international humanitarian law 
regulating military occupation.

The international community explicitly condemns governments’ deployment of 
internet shutdowns during wars and armed conflicts, including in Myanmar 
<https://www.accessnow.org/publication/internet-shutdowns-in-2023-mid-year-update/>
 and Tigray, Ethiopia 
<https://www.accessnow.org/tigray-shutdown-slowly-coming-back-online/>, where 
shutdowns have intensified humanitarian crises; in Yemen 
<https://www.accessnow.org/keepiton-for-peace-and-democracy-in-sudan-yemen-and-tajikistan/>,
 where Saudi-led coalition airstrikes have driven people even further off the 
grid; and in Ukraine 
<https://www.accessnow.org/who-is-shutting-down-the-internet-in-ukraine/>, 
where Russia has leveraged attacks on telecommunications infrastructure as a 
core part of its occupational strategy. In 2022 alone 
<https://www.accessnow.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/2022-KIO-Report-final.pdf>,
 the #KeepItOn coalition documented 33 internet shutdowns during conflict, 
alongside a strong correlation between internet shutdowns and severe human 
rights abuses.

Access Now expresses solidarity to the families and loved ones of all those 
affected by these tragic events in Gaza, Israel, Lebanon, and across the 
region. Internet shutdowns put people at risk in all circumstances, but these 
harms are compounded in conflict-affected areas, where the ability to access 
and share information is literally a matter of life and death. In Gaza, two 
million people are under siege. Caroline Tackett, Campaigns & Rapid Response 
Director at Access Now.

Israeli authorities must immediately stop targeting telecommunication 
infrastructure. Access Now calls on the international community to take all the 
necessary steps to support the immediate restoration of telecommunications 
services in the Gaza Strip and any other affected areas.



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