Skip to main content

Egyptian activists sound alarm over Twitter account suspensions

Social media users call for investigation into why critics of Egypt's government have had their accounts suspended over past 24 hours
Screen shot shared after Egyptian human rights activist Hend Nafea's Twitter account was suspended on Monday (Twitter)

Egyptians on Twitter are sounding the alarm after the accounts of several activists were suspended this week, days after small-scale but significant protests against President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi were held.

Among those who have had their account suspended in the past 24 hours include human rights activist Hend Nafea, an outspoken artist known as Ganzeer, and journalist Ahmad Hasan al-Sharqawi, according to those who have been suspended and supporters who compiled lists.

EXCLUSIVE: Twitter executive for Middle East is British Army 'psyops' soldier
Read More »

Stay informed with MEE's newsletters

Sign up to get the latest alerts, insights and analysis, starting with Turkey Unpacked

 

Several appeared to have had their accounts quickly reactivated, but raised questions about the timing following demonstrations on the past two Fridays calling for the fall of Sisi’s government.

All of those whose accounts were suspended have been publicly critical of the government.

Egyptian actor Khaled Abol Naga, in a tweet addressed to Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, said late on Monday that the suspensions were “not a glitch”.

“This is an obviously premeditated attack on Egyptian activists from Twitter MENA. We request an immediate investigation,” he wrote.

Ganzeer is the artist behind a popular drawing depicting Sisi as a thief that has been used in protests and also as the Twitter profile photo of tycoon-turned-whistleblower Mohamed Ali, whose own account was suspended briefly last week.

A series of videos Ali released in recent weeks accusing Sisi and other top officials of corruption provoked the recent protests.

Ganzeer told MEE that he only discovered his account had been suspended on Monday when he tried to send a tweet and a notice popped up telling him he was suspended, without explanation.

After Ganzeer appealed, he said, Twitter told him that he had been suspended for "using a trending hashtag or popular hashtag with an intent to subvert or manipulate a conversation or to drive traffic or attention to accounts, websites, products or initiatives" and for "tweeting with excessive, unrelated hashtags in a single tweet or across multiplate tweets".

"Obviously half-assed excuses because (a) they don't apply, and (b) not every single Egyptian on Twitter speaking up against Sisi could've been 'abusing hashtags'," he told MEE in an email.

"It's clear to me that this targeting was deliberate, and that Twitter was very clearly instructed to crack down on Egyptians shedding light on Sisi's terrible human rights abuses."

Ganzeer said his account was reactivated a couple of hours after he filed his appeal, thanks in part, he believes, to a few popular Twitter accounts that tweeted on his behalf. But he fears it will happen again.

'They have brought counterrevolution to Twitter'

- Amr Khalifa, Egyptian journalist and analyst

Amr Khalifa, a journalist and political analyst whose Twitter account was also suspended and then reactivated, told MEE he believed that closures were "an international and politicised 'shutting of the mouths' by MENA Twitter".

"They have brought counterrevolution to Twitter," he said, adding that he would be addressing the issue with the company on Tuesday.

Khalifa pointed to #نازلين_الساعه_تلاته  (#Takingtothestreetsatthree) a hashtag that Ali has been using on Tuesday, calling on protesters to demonstrate in Egypt this afternoon.

Khalifa said the hashtag has been attacked by what he described as Islamic State group bots. "This has been an ongoing pattern since shortly after 20 September, and Twitter knows it because I have been in touch with them," he told MEE.

Middle East Eye asked Twitter why the accounts were suspended and whether it was investigating the closures.

A spokesperson responded by email, saying the site takes action when behaviour violates its platform manipulation and spam policy.

"Additionally, Twitter regularly discloses data in relation to state-backed information operations on the service in what is now the largest archive of its kind in the industry," the spokesperson said. 

"We do this to empower academic and public understanding of these coordinated campaigns around the world."

Revealed: Seven years later, how Facebook shuts down free speech in Egypt
Read More »

Last month, Twitter banned the account of former Saudi royal court adviser Saud al-Qahtani and separately removed 267 accounts it said originated in the United Arab Emirates and Egypt and were primarily used to target regional rival Qatar and also amplify Saudi government messaging.

MEE asked Twitter to clarify whether it believed accounts it had suspended in Egypt were linked to state-backed information operations. Twitter responded by directing MEE to its standards for disclosing information about state-backed operations.

This isn’t the first time Egyptian activists - or Chinese, Iranian or Bangladeshi activists - have struggled to keep their social media accounts active.

Last year, MEE revealed that Facebook had shut down the pages and livestreams of activists from across Egypt’s political spectrum.

Experts say social media companies haven’t invested enough money to ensure that content, particularly in foreign languages or in nuanced political contexts, is moderated accurately, leaving platforms vulnerable to bot and trolls which file complaints against accounts at high volume.

'We have private, US-centric social media companies versus the rest of the world and in that battle, the world usually loses'

- Erin Gallagher, social media researcher

Erin Gallagher, an independent social media researcher who has recently analysed bots that have been bombarding popular Egyptian hashtags, told MEE it was clear that activity related to protests in Egypt was being targetted, but it was impossible to say for certain why.

"It could be that Twitter doesn't have enough human moderators overseeing Arabic language networks or it could be intentional interference such as brigading or mass reporting of certain accounts," she said. 

"Without any public acknowledgment from Twitter, we have no way to know what is happening or who is responsible."

She added: "Basically we have private, US-centric social media companies versus the rest of the world and in that battle, the world usually loses."

Middle East Eye delivers independent and unrivalled coverage and analysis of the Middle East, North Africa and beyond. To learn more about republishing this content and the associated fees, please fill out this form. More about MEE can be found here.