Reports: Myanmar blocks Twitter as resistance to coup grows

Myanmar's military has ordered local telecommunications providers to temporarily block Twitter and Instagram after imposing similar restrictions on Facebook earlier in the week, local media reported on Saturday.
The orders by the Ministry of
Transport and Communications come as a civil disobedience campaign has gained
momentum since Monday's coup.
The Myanmar regime ordered mobile
operators and internet service providers to block Twitter and Instagram from
Friday night, the Myanmar Times and the news portal The Irrawaddy reported.
Access to Facebook, where many had
been organizing resistance to the coup, was blocked until Monday. The regime
said the platform was contributing to instability in the country.
Telenor Myanmar, a telecoms
operator inside the country, on Friday confirmed that it had received the
directive, adding that the order to block Twitter and Instagram would stand
"until further notice."
The company said in a statement
that it is "gravely concerned with this development in Myanmar, and
emphasises that freedom of expression through access to communication services
should be maintained at all times, especially during times of conflict."
NetBlocks, which tracks internet
usage and cybersecurity, reported that "Myanmar is now in the midst of a
second nation-scale internet blackout" as of 10 am (0330 GMT) Saturday.
"Real-time network data show national
connectivity falling to 54 [per cent] of ordinary levels as users report
difficultly getting online," NetBlocks said on Twitter.
Posts and hashtags calling for people to perform acts of civil disobedience have gone viral since the military arrested top government officials, including the country's de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi, in early morning raids on Monday.