Free YemenPortal.net!

Campaign for Free Yemeni Media
A petition was set up to support Yemen’s freedom of the media. Kindly sign up at:

http://campaigns.aicongress.org/yemen/

and contribute by signing and by spreading the word to support the cause for the freedom of Yemeni media.

Also bookmark the blog initiating this campaign :

Campaign for a Free Media in Yemen

And its Yemen Portal section at:

http://yemenfreemedia.wordpress.com/yemen-portal/

I sincerely thank the launchers of this campaign for their efforts and hope you could join me in supporting the media in Yemen.

Walid Al-Saqaf
Admin
Yemen Portal

Access Yemen Portal!Finally, the blockage of YemenPortal.net in Yemen will come to an end for thousands who have been struggling to keep up with the most recent alternative domain.

Inspired by Hamed Saber’s “Access Flickr!”, Walid Al-Saqaf devised a similar program that will only be used to access yemenportal.net from within Yemen. A successful experiment had demonstrated its functionality and its web-based proxy allows it to become a channel to access many more blocked websites.

I am finally breathing a sigh of relief after tense days and weeks following the ban of yemenportal.net… But now with this software, it is possible to bypass the government’s filtering and allow users open access to information, which is one of their fundamental human rights.

Let’s hope that as many people get to know about this new program. It’s currently being checked by Firefox people and experts to allow it to go into the public area of the Add-ons. In the meantime, you can download and use it and send it to your friends and colleagues in Yemen and they are the ones who really need it.

The working links are:
http://mideastyouth.com/accessyp.xpi &
https://yemenportal.net/accessyp.xpi

Walid Al-Saqaf
Admin
YemenPortal.net

In a serious twist and upsetting development, the Yemeni government blocked this blog along with the five domains of yemenportal.net including (yemenportal.net, yemen.arabiaportal.net, yemenportal.org, yemenportal.info, and yemenportal1.info).
This is another blow to Yemen’s freedom of expression. Now even protesting a ban is seen as a ‘threat to national security’, which makes our effort to combat censorship even more important.

Thanks to all of you who have signed the petition. Please go ahead and spread the word. We need all the support we could get.

Sincerely,

Walid Al-Saqaf
Admin
YemenPortal.net

Official Launch!

April 2nd, 2008

Today we have officially launched this blog to the world. Please fee free to circulate the blog’s link (http://freeyemenportal.org) to maximize its publicity.

Find below the press release announcing the launch.

Initiated by Mideast Youth and YemenPortal.net

FreeYemenPortal.org launched to campaign for unblocking yemenportal.net

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

The anti-website censorship website freeyemenportal.org was officially launched today by Mideast Youth and YemenPortal.net as part of an ongoing campaign to free yemenportal.net from a two-month long ban imposed by the Yemeni government. Furthermore, yemenportal.info was also activated as a mirror site to circumvent the blockage of the earlier blocked domains.
The launch of the website coincides with an unprecedented wave of bans by the Yemeni regime targeting news and opinion websites including blogs and discussion forums. The blocking of Yemenportal.net and its alternative domain was protested by many local and international advocacy organizations including Reporters sans Frontiers, Committee to Protect Journalists, Article 19, the World Association of Newspapers plus many others.
The Director of MidEast Youth, Esra’a Al-Shafei said she committed to assisting the website’s founder and administrator Walid Al-Saqaf in bringing more pressure on the authorities to unblock the website. “It is imperative that we defend free speech and free access to information. The Yemeni authorities have failed to provide adequate grounds upon which the website has been banned within the country,” said Al-Shafei.
Al-Saqaf said he is campaigning on many levels to unblock the website, which is a search engine fetching and indexing news and opinion content on Yemen from about 1,500 sources. He hoped the new website launched today will include news updates, information about alternative domains, circumventing techniques, information on how to help the campaign, media coverage about the ban plus other relevant information.
How it started
YemenPortal.net started as part of Al-Saqaf’s master program in Sweden to analyze the Yemeni cyber sphere and examine the impact of news websites on democracy. But with more than 300,000 items today, the website became one of the most content-rich Yemeni online resources.
Between the day it was established in the end of May 2007 and until the day it was banned, YemenPortal.net maintained an impressive rate of growth to become one of the most prominent Yemeni websites and simultaneously, became one of the unique academic-driven projects that brought pride to the Örebro University’s Global Journalism Department. However, the website’s growth in terms of visitors and accessibility in Yemen was halted by governmental intervention when the ministry of communication in Yemen blocked it from being accessed inside Yemen on January 19, 2008.
Given his mission to study Yemen’s online media, YemenPortal.net’s founder hoped the authorities would encourage the project and facilitate his research. “But what happened shocked me and disappointed my website’s regular visitors. What is even more ironic is that for some time, the authorities kept on denying that they blocked the website despite clear evidence to the contrary. It is frustrating to see your own government fighting a project that could have enabled millions of Yemenis the chance to be well-informed.” Al-Saqaf said.
Al-Shafei of Mideast Youth supported this view by saying that the website should have been appreciated instead of being targeted because it presented a wide spectrum of news and opinions from diverse sources. “Yemen Portal is a vital source of information and should be rewarded for its exceptional contribution. Instead, the Yemeni authorities have made it inaccessible. We are here to change that.” She added that unblocking the website is necessary to prevent the government from manipulating public opinion by restricting specific views or news on the Internet from reaching the people.
The fight goes on
The ban of Al-Saqaf’s website triggered a resistance movement led by YemenPortal.net against the ban of all Yemeni websites. With the integrated technology of the search engine, Al-Saqaf established a special proxy to allow Internet users in Yemen to access the banned websites and also to read contents from more than a dozen banned sources on one page.
The resistance movement consequences as the authorities went ahead in banning its website as well. However, a new alternative website was activated in a record time and its web address was sent out to thousands of subscribers and readers. About a day after the alternative website was announced, the personal car of Al-Saqaf in Sana’a was vandalized by unknown men, prompting Al-Saqaf to close down the Sana’a office out of fear of other physical attacks that may materialize.
“If the attack was meant to be a warning message, then it only emboldened our determination to strengthen our resistance of website censorship.” Al-Saqaf said. “It also proves that the resistance efforts is actually working and causing some to take such desperate measures.”
Al-Saqaf vowed to continue the campaign despite hate emails and online messages targeting his person and calling for his prosecution allegedly for republishing material and giving a platform for banned websites that harms ‘national security and unity’. “I will not allow my website to become a tool in the hands of the government.” Al-Saqaf said. “This is why it is important to fight against this unjust ban, particularly as it contradicts with the freedom of expression, which is guaranteed by the Yemeni constitution.”

PRESS RELEASE

For immediate release - 14 March 2008

Yemen: Support the Freedom of Expression Movement

ARTICLE 19 strongly condemns the recurring attacks against freedom of the expression in Yemen and supports the local campaign for freedom of expression hosted by the Sisters’ Arab Forum for Human Rights. In recent months, websites and newspapers have been blocked, and trails against Al-Share’ newspaper and Editor Abdul-Kareem Al-Khaiwani have continued.

On March 4, the Ministry of Information ordered the ban the newspaper Al-Sabah for allegedly “threatening the unity of Yemen and order”. Authorities have also continued censoring websites the last of which was YemenPortal.net that had its original and alternative domain blocked earlier this year. Further severe restrictions on freedom of the press in particular is the continuation of the trials of the newspaper Al-Share’ and of journalist Abdul-Kareem Al-Khaiwani. Al-Khaiwani is being tried before the Special Criminal Court on Terrorism where if convicted may face the death penalty.

“ARTICLE 19 strongly condemns the ongoing severe restrictions imposed by the authorities. We call on the Yemeni government to honour its obligations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which the country acceded in 1987″ said Agnes Callamard, ARTICLE 19 Executive Director.

ARTICLE 19 would also like to remind the Yemeni authorities of their commitment to protect human rights by adopting the National Reform Agenda in 2006, which complemented their obligation under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which they ratified, as well as the Arab Charter on Human Rights.

We therefore call on the Yemeni government to:

* Immediately cancel judicial procedures initiated against Abdul-Kareem Al-Khaiwani before the Special Criminal Court on Terrorism.

* Immediately release from prison and cancel charges against media professionals and other individuals prosecuted for exercising their right to freedom of expression.

* Put an end to all restrictive policies and practices that limit freedom of expression, such as banning journalists and newspapers from publication.

* Reform and reinforce the judiciary’s independence to ensure its effectiveness, impartiality and independence.

* Extend an invitation to the Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression to carry out a visit to the country.

NOTES TO EDITORS

* For more information, please contact Sarah Richani, ARTICLE 19 Programme Officer, sarah@article19.org

* For in depth information about the situation of freedom of expression in Yemen check ARTICLE 19’s report Yemen: Freedom of Expression in Peril available in English http://www.article19.org/pdfs/publications/yemen-foereport.pdf and in Arabic at http://www.article19.org/pdfs/publications/yemen-foereport-arabic.pdf.

* The report was made possible with the funding from the National Endowment for Democracy (N.E.D.)

ARTICLE 19 is an independent human rights organisation that works globally to protect and promote the right to freedom of expression. It takes its name from Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which guarantees free speech.

If you no longer wish to remain on ARTICLE 19’s mailing list, please unsubscribe here

Alternatively, if you would like to receive region specific information only, send an email to subscribe stating which regions you would like to receive information about.

ARTICLE 19

6-8 Amwell Street London EC1R 1UQ United Kingdom

Tel: +44 20 7278 9292 - Fax: +44 20 7278 7660 - info@article19.org - www.article19.org

As far as we know -as of today- the status of the domains of yemenportal.net are as follows:

It is not ruled out that the authorities ban the second open alternative domain any day now, particularly as its popularity grows. So, please subscribe to the blog to remain up-to-date and learn about the status of those domains.

The ban of yemenportal.net had a devastating impact on its readership, which is predominantly based in Yemen.

The below graph illustrates how radical an effect the first ban had on January 19, which is the date the government banned the website for the first time:

It can be clearly seen how the number of hits plummeted to about 10% of its average number of hits just after the ban took place, preventing thousands of online readers in Yemen from viewing the website’s contents. After the first ban, an alternative website was set and slowly visitors in Yemen started to get to know about it. But then again, the authorities tracked down the alternative website and had it blocked as well on February 9th and the blow graph illustrates the impact that had on the number of hits of the website just after the second ban took place (on February 9):

 

 

Since the second ban, an alternative third website was set up and its address was sent out to subscribers by email. The successive bans have resulted in frustration to thousands of readres in Yemen and demonstrate the level of intimidation and restrictions the auhtorities are practicing against it.

Help us overcome this by supporting our movement by visiting this page.

As many of you may know, after the ban of yemenportal.net, the website initiated a nation-wide resistance movement online. It is an effort to neutralize the advantage of the Yemeni government in restricting access to specific websites due to news or opinion content that it may dislike.

This resistance is starting to yield results with more people becoming familiar with it.

The idea was to basically set up a robot on the website blocked.arabiaportal.net to retrieve the content of all blocked websites and list them according to their sources and category. There are articles belonging to forums, news websites, and opinion websites. All of those stories can be viewed in full at: http://blocked.arabiaportal.net/yemen/

However, this resistance movement must have offended the regime so the website (blocked.arabiaportal.net/yemen) itself was banned. Hence, we established yet another domain yemenportal.org and put the blocked content of all those websites at yemenportal.org/blocked.

This is what the resistance is all about: never give up. It will be like this, i.e., they ban a website and we establish another, until they give up on this chase and let the people in Yemen browse banned websites freely.

Thus far, we have been able to get close to a thousand emails of people who subscribed to our service at http://yemenportal.org/?signup=1 and other websites that have already been in touch with us before.

Every time the government blocks our alternative website, we will open another. The attack on the car of yemenportal.net, which took place after we set up the second alternative domain, had only proven to us that there are elements unhappy with our acts and are willing to go to extreme lengths to deter us. However, this has not achieved their objective and we decided to close down the office and have no representative in Yemen to avoid any clashes by those people.

In brief, our resistance now is fully 100% online. But this resistance cannot grow and be more effective unless you help out and participate.

Therefore, the best you could do to help this resistance grow is to put up the below graph in a convenient location on your blog or website and have it point to the following link: http://yemenportal.org/blocked.

You can also add one of the below campaign’s logo pointing to this website: http://freeyemenportal.org:

 

 

You can make a difference. Please help our movement grow and free yemenportal.net and all other Yemeni websites.

Walid Al-Saqaf
Admin, founder
YemenPortal.net

Media coverage thus far

March 17th, 2008

Here are some of the many stories published or broadcast in the media related to yemenportal.net’s ban.

If you found reports in the media about the ban that are not listed above, we’d be delighted if you could send them to us as well. Furthermore, note that the Arabic stories are available in the Arabic section here.

YemenPortal.net

Below you will find links to the different statements and protest letters issued in relation to the ban of the portal. They are listed by date of issuance.

If you have seen or written a statement that is not available above, please do let us know.

YemenPortal.net