He
has a hotline to God but finds it somewhat harder to tweet. Retired
South African archbishop Desmond Tutu launched a Twitter account on
Thursday only to find it suspended hours later.
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The
81-year-old's @TutuLegacy feed picked up hundreds of followers soon
after going live but was then blocked, much to the dismay of his
foundation, which runs the account.
The
suspension was only temporary, however, and on Thursday afternoon the
foundation said it had received an apology. "Twitter says it's 'sorry
for the inconvenience' over our suspension," it tweeted. "We got caught
up in a spam cleanup. Glad it wasn't something we said."
Earlier,
Tutu, who officially retired from public life in 2010, had been widely
welcomed to Twitter. His first tweet read: "In an ode to the words
spoken by Mandela when he retired from public life: 'I am elderly and
decrepit. Don't tweet me; I'll tweet you!' DT." Another read: "Some have
described Twitter as a blessing in the hands of retired members of the
clergy. There is no space to ramble. DT." But then came the sudden
blockage, prompting the foundation to express dismay at heavy-handed
action by the Silicon Valley giant. It said: "Twitter has not explained
how following 30 people could be construed as 'aggressive following' or
whether the number of people who followed @TutuLegacy in a short space
of time was to blame."
Tutu's
daughter Mpho, who heads the foundation, added: "I hope the powers that
be at Twitter find it in their hearts to fix the problem and let us
communicate again. We need to reassure all those people who started
following us today that this is the real deal!"
Tutu
himself said: "The @TutuLegacy is the only real Twitter account that
speaks for the Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation, through the
voices of Desmond Tutu and the reverend Mpho Tutu, who runs the
foundation."
The
brief snub to Tutu came just days after his fellow Nobel peace laureate
Nelson Mandela received a written warning that his electricity and
water might be cut off over an unpaid council bill. It transpired that
the notice had been sent to the wrong address.
Meanwhile
Tutu's home in Cape Town was burgled early on Wednesday morning while
he and his wife were asleep. The couple were not harmed.
Tutu's
spokesman, Roger Friedman, said a remote control device for the house
gate was stolen in the incident. Tutu got up to check after the house
alarm went off, noticed nothing unusual and went back to bed. Later he
realised there had been a burglary.
Police
say they are investigating a home burglary in Cape Town's Milnerton
suburb in which small household items were stolen. No arrests have been
made.
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