Current Twitter CEO Elon Musk defended the platform’s decision to restrict access to some content in Turkey a day ahead of the country’s election.
“We have informed the account holders of this action in line with our policy. This content will remain available in the rest of the world,” the account said.
Turkey Election
Voters in Turkey on Sunday will be electing both a president and parliament for a five-year term. They will decide whether to reelect or oust Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan. He’s been in the position since 2014, and prior to that, served as prime minister from 2003.To win the presidency, a candidate must get more than 50 percent of ballots cast. Otherwise, there will be a runoff election on May 28 to be held between the two leading candidates, who are Erdogan and opposition leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu.
Turkish citizens will also be voting for 600 members of parliament.
Erdogan most recently shook hands with Musk at the FIFA World Cup in 2022. Prior to that, the two had a video conference call in December 2021 to talk about electric vehicles and satellites, because SpaceX signed a deal with Turkey that year to launch the country’s first communications satellite.
In February, when a 7.8-magnitude earthquake hit Turkey and killed over 50,000 people, the government reduced access to Twitter, as well as TikTok, for a short time.
This is because Turkey’s government has a lot of power to control the internet and “impose restrictions such as arbitrarily removing content critical of Erdoğan or the government party,” and has had a history of doing so in the past, including by threatening to “throttle platforms that don’t comply with take-down demands,” the group said.
“Given the sorry state of Turkey’s mainstream media, the integrity of Turkey’s election depends upon it,” it added, referring to how social media platforms should maintain access to content, for everyone. HRW noted that Turkey’s mainstream media is “overwhelmingly aligned with the government.”
