Expressing that it's targeted dictatorship was 70 Gabon government sites, an anonymous hackers has on Sunday collective claimed it hacked into the websites of more than 70 government websites.
Not excluding the ministries of communications and the civil service were inaccessible on Sunday, as were the websites of at least 30 other institutions, though there was no independent confirmation of the Anonymous claim.
The presidency website continued to function as normal.
“Huge surprise attack against the government of Gabon today,” read a message on a twitter account close to the Anonymous group.
“More than 70 government sites (attacked). All their servers and mail systems are offline. The dictators should have been expecting us,” the tweet continued.
Hackers from the loose-knit Anonymous collective have taken aim at a string of high-profile targets around the globe in not too long years ago.
The group originated in 2003, adopting the Guy Fawkes mask as its symbol. The mask is a stylised portrayal of an oversized smile, rosy cheeks and a wide moustache upturned at both ends.
The Gabon authorities did not comment on the issue when contacted by AFP.
Voting in Gabon ended Saturday in the second round of legislative elections with the party of President Ali Bongo, whose family has ruled the country for nearly 50 years, coasting towards victory.
This was the first time the Anonymous group has claimed responsibility for action in a Central African nation.
In August Anonymous hackers claimed responsibility for bringing down government websites in Spain, in protest at Madrid’s efforts to block Catalonia’s separatist drive.
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