Algeria goes offline to stop students cheating

File photo showing Algerian students taking their exams. (Magharebia/Flickr)
Updated 20 June 2018
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Algeria goes offline to stop students cheating

ALGIERS: Algeria went offline on Wednesday for the start of high school diploma exams, the first in a series of Internet blackouts to stop students cheating.
Mobile and fixed Internet lines were cut across the country for a total of two hours, to coincide with the start of two separate school tests, AFP journalists in Algiers said.
A third hour-long Internet shutdown was planned for later on Wednesday, according to a schedule issued by public operator Algerie Telecom.
Internet services were cut “in compliance with instructions from the government, aimed at ensuring the high school diploma tests run smoothly,” Algerie Telecom said.
The pre-planned blackouts are due to continue for the whole period of exams, until Monday, to combat cheating among more than 700,000 students.
Ali Kahlane, president of telecoms association AOTA, said operators were required to conform to the government’s demands.
The 2016 exam season was marred by widespread cheating, with exam questions published on social media before or at the start of the test.
Last year, authorities requested operators shut down access to social media, but the move did not entirely end the problem.
Latecomers were banned from taking the exam and instead had to attend a specially organized test.
Electronics with Internet access, such as mobile phones and tablets, were this year banned from Algeria’s more than 2,000 exam centers.
Metal detectors have meanwhile been set up at the entrance to the centers, Education Minister Nouria Benghabrit said.
In a further move to prevent questions being leaked, the minister said mobile phone jammers and surveillance cameras had been installed in locations where the exam papers are printed.


Lebanese army says it has achieved goal of state monopoly on arms in the south in ‘effective and tangible way’

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Lebanese army says it has achieved goal of state monopoly on arms in the south in ‘effective and tangible way’

  • The army had set a year-end deadline to clear non-state weaponry from ⁠southern Lebanon, which borders ‌Israel, before moving on ‍to ‍other areas of the ‍country
BEIRUT: The Lebanese army said on Thursday that it had ​achieved the goal of a state monopoly on arms in the country’s south in an “effective and tangible way,” but said ‌there was ‌more work ‌to ⁠be ​done ‌to clear unexploded ordnance and tunnels in the area.
The army had set a year-end deadline to clear non-state weaponry from ⁠southern Lebanon, which borders ‌Israel, before moving on ‍to ‍other areas of the ‍country.
It said it had extended operational control over the south, except for ​areas still occupied by Israeli troops.
The statement did ⁠not mention Lebanese armed group Hezbollah, which fought a year-long war with Israel that ended in a 2024 ceasefire that stipulated that only Lebanon’s state security forces were allowed to ‌carry arms.