The country where the internet has been shutdown for one year
Salim Azim Assani, who lives in Chad, is finding out the hard way after living under internet censorship for more than 365 days and counting.
Assani, 33, runs WenakLabs, a digital co-working space in the Chadian capital of N’Djamena and has resorted to using expensive Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) to circumvent the shutdown.

“It’s absolutely necessary to use VPN and very often we find ourselves abroad using it and only realize that we don’t need it elsewhere,” Assani said.

A VPN acts as a secure tunnel between devices and the internet; it protects users from snooping and censorship and allows them to mask their location on the internet.
Deby has been at the helm since 1990 and had previously pledged to restore term limits before the country’s 2016 elections.

Since March 2018, people in Chad have been unable to access sites such as WhatsApp, Viber, Facebook, and Twitter. It’s not the first time in Chad either: a shutdown of the internet lasted for eight months in 2016 following a disputed presidential vote that secured a fifth term in office for Deby.
Internet shutdowns are frequently used by governments across Africa.
It’s difficult to say if these measures are effective but they adversely affect the economy of these countries.

“The Chadian government needs to take advantage of the opportunities the internet offers for economic development and especially for young people,” says Muhammad Sani Abdullahi, a former World Bank policy expert and current member of its Advisory Council on Citizen Engagement.
Beyond the trial and conviction of its former dictator Hissene Habre for crimes against humanity, Chad hardly ever finds itself in the spotlight.
Indeed Chad is an important ally of Western nations in the fight against terrorism, says John Campbell, a fellow at the Council for Foreign Relations and former US ambassador to Nigeria.
With such Western military allies, Owono says there would be international pressure on the Chadian government to restore social media access to its people.
As the fight for a full restoration rages on, Assani of WenakLabs says he feels “a little bit of anger, revolt, and discouragement.”

“It’s as if the internet was a monster whose head had to be cut off,” he said.