<p><em>The right
to freedom of expression is guaranteed under international law and in
the constitutions of most countries. The content of this right has
developed and recently has come to be thought of as including the
internet as a medium of communication, and the question is raised
whether access to the internet is protected under the current set of
normative principles. The right to freedom of expression is fully
protected under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, to
which Ethiopia is a party. The Ethiopian government restricts freedom of
expression on the internet and has adopted extraneous limiting
measures. Most of these measures are incompatable with the African
Charter. Restrictions to freedom of expression on the internet include
internet shutdowns, hate speech and disinformation regulation,
repressive laws, and internet censorship. These limitations may
(in)directly muzzle freedom of expression in Ethiopia.</em></p>
<p><em>The writer argues that
illegitimate limitations of the right fall short of the quadruple tests
of limitation measures, both under the African Charter and the Ethiopian
Constitution. As a result, these limitations violate individuals’
freedom of expression on the internet. Finally, the article suggests
that the Ethiopian government should draw guidance from the African
Commission’s 2019 Declaration on Freedom of Expression and Access to
Information containing rules on limitation measures imposed on freedom
of expression on the internet.</em></p>