You're reading: Tajikistan blocks US-funded news website

DUSHANBE, Tajikistan — Tajikistan has blocked a popular U.S.-funded news website, only days after barring access to social networking site Facebook for featuring content allegedly insulting to the Central Asian nation's president.

State
communications service chief, Beg Zukhurov, said Friday that the block
on Ozodi, the Tajik-language service of Radio Free Europe, wase in
response to public complaints that the site featured content detrimental
to the national interest.

Tajikistan has low levels of Internet penetration, but the former Soviet
republic’s authorities have nonetheless proven nervous over critical
reporting and any signs government opponents could use online media to
mobilize.

Radio Free Europe is funded by the U.S. Congress and has local news services in several former Soviet nations.

Zukhurov
drew withering online mockery this week after demanding in an interview
to know who the owner of Facebook was and asking that he travel to Tajikistan to meet with him in person.

Radio
Free Europe’s English-language site subsequently published a photo of
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg holding up a sign in Tajik reading: “I
own this network.”

Zukhurov has claimed that groups of volunteers
trawl the Internet for inaccuracies and material defamatory to
government officials and businessmen. He has also said Internet users
are being paid up to $10,000 to post online remarks criticizing state
officials.

Zukhurov maintains that at least a million people in Tajikistan — one seventh of the population — support barring certain websites, including Facebook.

It was unclear how Zukhurov was sourcing these claims, which critics in Tajikistan have derided.

Other websites to be targeted by online blocks in the past include the BBC, Russian state-owned news station Vesti, and YouTube.

Access
to the country’s most popular news website, Asia-Plus, was barred in
July in an apparent attempt to limit information about fighting between
government troops and armed groups in a remote area on the border with
Afghanistan.