Portugal calls for joint EU funding for defence spending
The websites were hacked by a Portuguese branch of Anonymous, an international hacking group. The group provided a list of the sites it had taken down on Facebook. At the time of reporting, many of the websites were still down.
The 17 youths arrested, including Angolan rapper Luaty Beirao, were sentenced to between two and eight-and-a-half years in prison, in a ruling that Amnesty International said was “an affront to justice”.
Human rights groups have criticized the harsh sentences for the activists, who were arrested in June after discussing a book about non-violent resistance. The accused maintain that they are peaceful protestors merely calling on their president to step down.
In a statement on its Facebook page late on Tuesday, the Anonymous Portugal group listed the government websites it said it had attacked.
None of the websites were accessible on Wednesday.
“The real criminals are outside, defended by the capitalist system that increasingly spreads in the minds of the weak,” Anonymous said.
There was no immediate comment from the government on the alleged cyber-attack.
Amnesty called for the immediate release of the activists, 15 of whom were detained at a political meeting in the capital Luanda last June.
“Angolan authorities use the criminal justice system to silence dissenting views,” said Amnesty director Deprose Muchena.
“The activists have been wrongly convicted in a deeply-politicised trial. They are the victims of a government determined to intimidate anyone who dares to question its repressive policies.”
At the sentencing, about 30 protesters outside the court yelled “free the youths, arrest dictator Jose Eduardo dos Santos”, the president of Angola since 1979.
A man who shouted inside the court that the sentences were a “travesty of justice” was himself sentenced on Tuesday to eight months in jail.
The activists insist they are peaceful campaigners lobbying for dos Santos, 73, to step down.
This month, he said he would retire in 2018 but the announcement was received with scepticism following two similar pledges in the past. His current mandate ends at the end of next year.
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