News / National
Internet closure a betrayal
30 Jan 2019 at 02:49hrs | Views
Media Institute of Southern Africa (Misa) Zimbabwe legal expert Kuda Hove has said telecommunications companies betrayed their customers by failing to challenge government's recent decision to shut down the Internet during recent protests against fuel price hikes.
Speaking at an AMH conversations recently, Hove said telecommunications service providers should have asked their lawyers to look at the statute used by the State to shut down the Internet.
"It's an issue where even incompetent lawyers could pick because the directive was issued by someone without the power to do so. They betrayed their customers," he said.
Hove said government only has the right to shut down the Internet if the country was at war or in a state of emergency.
"Our argument was very simple. It was based on the premise that the government does not have the right when the country is not at war and in a state of emergency to shut down the Internet nationwide or any other form of communication,." Hove said.
Speaking at the same event, NewsDay online editor John Mokwetsi said Internet shutdown destroyed any hope the outside world was holding onto that Zimbabwe was now on a new path under a new leadership.
"We lost an opportunity to show the world we are tolerant," Mokwetsi said.
Speaking at an AMH conversations recently, Hove said telecommunications service providers should have asked their lawyers to look at the statute used by the State to shut down the Internet.
"It's an issue where even incompetent lawyers could pick because the directive was issued by someone without the power to do so. They betrayed their customers," he said.
Hove said government only has the right to shut down the Internet if the country was at war or in a state of emergency.
"Our argument was very simple. It was based on the premise that the government does not have the right when the country is not at war and in a state of emergency to shut down the Internet nationwide or any other form of communication,." Hove said.
Speaking at the same event, NewsDay online editor John Mokwetsi said Internet shutdown destroyed any hope the outside world was holding onto that Zimbabwe was now on a new path under a new leadership.
"We lost an opportunity to show the world we are tolerant," Mokwetsi said.
Source - newsday