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.”