
Tanzania blocks X over ‘porn and homosexual' content, citing clash with national laws and culture
DAR ES SALAAM, June 5 — Tanzania yesterday said it had blocked access to social media platform X over the presence of pornographic content, two weeks after government-linked accounts were hacked.
X announced last year that it would no longer block 'consensually produced and distributed' adult content.
Tanzania's Minister of Information Jerry Silaa told a local TV station this 'contradicts our regulations'.
He said X now has 'pornography and homosexuality, which are all contrary to our country's laws, culture, customs, and traditions.'
Tanzania blocked access to X on May 20, which appeared to coincide with the hacking of a police account which was used to falsely announce the death of President Samia Suluhu Hassan.
The YouTube account of the country's tax authority was also inflitrated with pornographic content on the same day.
The shutdown comes amid criticisms of a severe crackdown on the opposition ahead of elections in October.
Social media shutdowns have been reported during past election periods.
Silaa said Tanzania was monitoring content on other online platforms deemed to be in breach of the country's laws.
'If you notice in any social media, not necessarily X, that you search for a content on YouTube or other networks and it's unavailable, then know that the government is working to protect consumers,' he said. — AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Free Malaysia Today
16 minutes ago
- Free Malaysia Today
We are sorry, prime minister
PETALING JAYA : The misuse of video outtakes on social media has become a growing concern recently, with netizens editing clips to malign public personalities, distort narratives and mislead audiences. With content zipping around social media almost instantaneously, an innocent moment can be turned into a controversy almost immediately. Unfortunately, FMT found itself a victim of this recently, with our popular Malay news presenter Nur Hailee Izzati unwittingly putting herself in the spotlight. Hailee had on May 30 posted a seemingly harmless outtake of herself laughing as she struggled to begin reading a news item that made mention of the prime minister. Unfortunately, the video clip was misused by a netizen who edited it to include a disparaging caricature of the prime minister, making it appear as though FMT and Hailee were mocking him. As a result, Hailee was forced to issue an apology, which she readily did. Misused video outtakes can cause grave reputational damage which may be hard to undo. The consequences can also be severe, with both FMT and Hailee receiving instant backlash from all corners, bringing harm to the brand and jeopardising careers. Ultimately, media outlets like FMT and journalists like Hailee must exercise care in what they do both in their professional and personal capacities. Meanwhile, netizens, many of whom are now themselves content creators, must do their part by consuming and using content ethically to maintain proper digital discourse. That is a tough ask, and can only be achieved if everyone plays their part. FMT and Hailee regret the manipulation of one of our unused video clips in a way that has brought ridicule to Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim. We sincerely apologise to him and to all our readers and viewers.


Free Malaysia Today
4 hours ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Trump is not interested in talking to Musk, White House official says
The falling-out began when Elon Musk criticised Donald Trump's tax-cut and spending bill, calling it a 'disgusting abomination'. (AP pic) WASHINGTON : US President Donald Trump is not interested in talking with his former ally Elon Musk, amid a bitter feud over the president's sweeping tax-cut bill, a White House official said on Friday, adding that no phone call between the two men is planned for the day. A separate White House official had said earlier that Trump and Musk were going to talk to each other on Friday. Trump, the world's most powerful leader, and Musk, the world's richest man, conducted an extraordinary day of hostilities on Thursday – largely over social media – marking a stark end to a close alliance. Shares in Musk's Tesla closed down 14% on Thursday, losing about US$150 billion in market value in the largest single-day decline in value in the electric vehicle maker's history. In pre-market trading on Friday they pared some of those losses, rising as much as 5% after the early news that the two men were scheduled to speak. Musk had bankrolled a large part of Trump's presidential campaign and was then brought as one of the president's most visible advisers, heading up a sweeping and controversial effort to downsize the federal workforce and slash spending. The verbal punches erupted on Thursday after Trump criticised Musk in the Oval Office and the pair then traded barbs on their social media platforms: Trump's Truth Social and Musk's X. The falling-out had begun brewing days ago when Musk, who left his role as head of the Department of Government Efficiency a week ago, denounced Trump's sweeping tax-cut and spending bill. The president initially stayed quiet while Musk campaigned to torpedo the bill, saying it would add too much to the nation's US$36.2 trillion in debt. Trump broke his silence on Thursday, telling reporters he was 'very disappointed' in Musk. 'Look, Elon and I had a great relationship. I don't know if we will anymore,' Trump said. As Trump spoke, Musk responded on X. 'Without me, Trump would have lost the election,' wrote Musk, who spent nearly US$300 million backing Trump and other Republicans in last year's election. In another post, Musk asserted that Trump's signature import tariffs would push the US into a recession later this year. 'The easiest way to save money in our Budget, Billions and Billions of Dollars, is to terminate Elon's Governmental Subsidies and Contracts,' Trump posted. Minutes after the closing bell, Musk replied, 'Yes,' to a post on X saying Trump should be impeached, something that would be highly unlikely given Trump's Republicans hold majorities in both chambers of Congress. Space business Musk's businesses also include rocket company and government contractor SpaceX and its satellite unit Starlink. Musk, whose space business plays a critical role in the US government's space programme, said on Thursday that as a result of Trump's threats he would begin decommissioning SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft. Dragon is the only US spacecraft capable of sending astronauts to the International Space Station. Late in the day, Musk backed off the threat. In another sign of a possible detente to come, Musk subsequently wrote: 'You're not wrong,' in response to billionaire investor Bill Ackman saying Trump and Musk should make peace. Trump and Musk are both political fighters with a penchant for using social media to attack their perceived enemies, and many observers had predicted a falling-out. Musk hit at the heart of Trump's agenda earlier this week when he targeted what Trump has named his 'big, beautiful bill', calling it a 'disgusting abomination' that would deepen the federal deficit. His attacks amplified a rift within the Republican Party that could threaten the bill's prospects in the Senate. Nonpartisan analysts say Trump's bill could add US$2.4 trillion to US$5 trillion to the nation's US$36.2 trillion in debt. A prolonged feud between the pair could make it harder for Republicans to keep control of Congress in next year's midterm.


Free Malaysia Today
17 hours ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Edgar Lungu, former Zambian president, dies at 68
Edgar Lungu became Zambia's sixth president in 2015. (AP pic) LUSAKA : Zambia's former president Edgar Lungu, who held power for almost seven years until 2021, died yesterday in a hospital in South Africa at the age of 68, his party and family announced. Lungu had been receiving specialised medical treatment in a clinic in Pretoria, the Patriotic Front (PF), his political party, said in a statement. 'My father had been under medical supervision in recent weeks,' his daughter and member of the country's national assembly Tasila Lungu-Mwansa said in a video shared on social media. 'His condition was managed with dignity and privacy with support from all well-wishers,' she said, without providing details of the cause of his death. Lungu, a trained military officer and lawyer, became the country's sixth president in 2015 after the death in office of his predecessor Michael Sata. While campaigning to be elected leader of the large but sparsely populated, resource-rich country, Lungu described himself as an 'ordinary Zambian of humble beginnings'. He narrowly won the 2016 election against Hakainde Hichilema of the United Party for National Development (UPND) after a violent campaign that saw clashes between the two parties. He pledged to unite the country and rebuild the economy. Conservative Amnesty International said that repression under Lungu had pushed Zambia to the edge, with a 'brutal crackdown on human rights' and 'brazen attacks on any form of dissent'. On social issues, he revealed a conservative side, saying for example that gay rights were 'foreign'. Born in 1956 in Chadiza in eastern Zambia, Lungu was from the minority Nsenga ethnic group, but he often described himself as a non-tribal. 'In private, ECL, as he is affectionately known, was disarmingly personable and very down to earth,' Musa Mwenye, a former attorney general posted on X. He stepped down from the presidency in 2021 when Hichilema, the current president, won fresh elections by a landslide. He had said he planned to run for president again in the 2026 elections. President Hichilema expressed on social media his 'deep sorrow' at the news of Lungu's passing, calling Zambians to come together 'above political affiliation or personal conviction'. Lungu had suffered from recurring achalasia, a condition caused by narrowing of the oesophagus, for which he had been treated in South Africa.