Audio By Carbonatix
Gabon's media regulator has announced the suspension of social media platforms "until further notice", saying online content has fuelled conflict and deepened divisions in the country.
In a televised statement on Tuesday evening, the High Authority for Communication (HAC) cited the "spread of false information", "cyberbullying" and the "unauthorised disclosure of personal data" as reasons for the decision.
Its spokesperson Jean-Claude Mendome did not specify which platforms would be affected, but WhatsApp, Facebook and TikTok are popular in the country.
Gabon is led by General Brice Oligui Nguema, who won presidential elections last year after leading a military coup in 2023.
The 50-year-old president is facing growing social unrest, with teachers and other civil servants staging strikes over pay and working conditions.
Social media platforms were still accessible on Wednesday morning, but a switch-off is expected soon.
Mendome's announcement has come as a shock to the central African nation of about 2.5 million people, where social media is particular popular with younger people who use it for business as well as pleasure.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, a restaurant owner in the capital, Libreville, told the BBC the suspension would greatly affect his business, since he uses social media for promotion.
"Almost 40% of my customers decided to order or come to the restaurant after seeing our advertising on social media… I won't be able to catch new customers, because clients are attracted by what they are seeing, reviews from friends, pictures," he said.
"We are entering a phase where we don't even know if we are moving forward with global development or if we are sliding backward into total underdevelopment."
However, a taxi driver seemed unbothered about the move, telling the BBC: "There's no smoke without fire.
"For the authorities to take such a decision, something must have certainly prompted it."
Nguema won last year's poll with more than 90% of the vote, two years after his coup ended more than five decades of rule by the Bongo family.
At the time he pledged to reform Gabon, a small, oil- and timber-rich country, where digital blackouts were used by the previous governments to control information.
For the first time, foreign and independent media were allowed to film the ballot count during the election.
The media regulator spokesman said the suspension was prompted by the recurring dissemination on social networks and digital platforms of " inappropriate, defamatory, hateful, and insulting content that undermines human dignity, social cohesion, the stability of the republic's institutions, and national security".
Such actions, he said, were likely to "generate social conflict" and "seriously jeopardise national unity, democratic progress, and achievements".
But "freedom of expression, including freedom of comment and criticism," remained "a fundamental right enshrined in Gabon", Mendome added.
School teachers in Gabon began striking in December over pay and working conditions, with protests over similar grievances spreading to other public sectors, including health and education.
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