Bangui, Central African Republic
Text messages in the Central African Republic are now considered a
security threat and their use has been suspended, the telecommunications
ministry said Tuesday.
Mobile phone users in the Central African Republic who try to send text
messages are getting the response: “SMS not allowed”.
"The use of any SMS by all mobile phone subscribers is suspended
from Monday June 2, 2014, until further notice," the ministry said in a
letter to mobile phone operators in the conflict-torn country.
STRIKE BY SMS
It said the decision was made by Prime Minister Andre Nzapayeke.
Since last week there has been a resurge of violence in the capital
Bangui, as well as a call for a general strike relayed by SMS in the past few
days.
Nzapayeke on Sunday had made an appeal for people to return to work in
Bangui following several days of protests that had paralysed the capital.
A source in the government told AFP the suspension of text messages would
last “for several days”. When AFP in Bangui tried to send a text, that
message appeared: “SMS not allowed”.
The deeply impoverished, majority Christian country has been struggling
to restore security in the face of relentless tit-for-tat attacks between
Christian vigilante groups and mostly Muslim ex-Seleka rebels who seized
control in a coup last year but were forced from power in January.
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