SEAPA Alert: On eve of Saffron Revolution anniversary, Burma's exiled news sites attacked

SEAPA Alert: On eve of Saffron Revolution anniversary, Burma's exiled news sites attacked
On the eve of the first anniversary of the week-long Saffron Revolution, the websites of three leading Burmese news agencies in exile have come under attack, rendering them inaccessible since the afternoon ...

On the eve of the first anniversary of the week-long Saffron Revolution, the websites of three leading Burmese news agencies in exile have come under attack, rendering them inaccessible since the afternoon of September 17.

Distributed Denial of Services (DdoS) attacks overwhelmed the websites of the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB), "The Irrawaddy" and the "New Era Journal". Under DDOS attacks, websites are flooded with so much automated requests for data that their respective systems effectively get jammed.

The websites of the three Burmese news agencies have not been responding to their requests since Wednesday afternoon.

"It is pretty certain that we are under attack. We were attacked at about 11 a.m. today," Toe Zaw Latt, chief of DVB Thailand bureau told Mizzima.com, an Alerts partner of the Southeast Asian Press Alliance (SEAPA). Mizzima, which is also an independent news service run by exiled Burmese in New Delhi, India, itself experienced a similar DDOS attack last July.

"The Irrawaddy" magazine, an independent news provider run by Burmese journalists exiled in Chiang Mai, Thailand, said its website has been facing problems since Tuesday evening. "We can confirm today (18 September 2008) that we are being attacked," Aung Zaw, editor-in-chief of "The Irrawaddy" told Mizzima.

The Bangkok-based "New Era Journal" also confirmed that its website is also under attack.

This is the second attack against the Oslo-based DVB in the past three months. The webmaster of the DVB said it is difficult to determine the level of the attack, adding that they could not predict when the sites will be accessible again. "We do not know who is behind all this, but it is certain that these are deliberate attacks," Toe Zaw Latt said.

Mizzima noted, meanwhile, that Internet speed has also been down in Rangoon since Wednesday morning between 10 am to 3 pm. As a result, several Internet cafes in downtown Yangon reportedly had to close. Sources said Internet connection only resumed at its regular speed at 6 pm.

September 18 marks the anniversary of the start of street protests in Yangon which built up to a violent military crackdown in Burma last year. Burmese journalists--both inside and outside the country--have been worried about how Burma's junta might deal with the anniversary of what has come to be known as the "Saffron Revolution".