Global Times

Iran in talks to unblock Twitter, says new communicat­ions minister

-

Iran’s new communicat­ions minister said Tuesday that negotiatio­ns were underway with Twitter to unblock the service, which has been banned for years despite being used even by the country’s supreme leader.

The micro- blogging platform was barred at the time of mass anti- regime protests in 2009 that followed allegation­s of massive rigging in the re- election of president Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d.

“[ Twitter] has announced that it is prepared to negotiate to resolve problems,” Mohammad- Javad Azari Jahromi told the Iran daily newspaper. “Considerin­g the current situation there are grounds for such negotiatio­n and interactio­n. Twitter is not an immoral environmen­t needing to be blocked,” he added.

The 36- year- old Jahromi became Iran’s youngest- ever minister this week, and the first to be born after the 1979 Islamic revolution.

His selection has been criticized by rights groups over his involvemen­t in surveillan­ce during and after the mass anti- regime protests of 2009.

He rejected the criticism in a meeting with lawmakers this week, saying: “I wasn’t responsibl­e for surveillan­ce – I was in charge of the technical infrastruc- ture for the surveillan­ce industry, and I consider it an honor.”

But Jahromi is also seen as a critic of online censorship in Iran, where platforms like Facebook, YouTube and Twitter remain banned even if millions use them daily through easily available privacy software.

He said officials were also looking at ways to unblock YouTube while still censoring “immoral content” on the videoshari­ng service, and that a pilot project would allow universiti­es to access the site.

There was no immediate response from Twitter or YouTube.

Jahromi added that the final decision on unblocking sites lay with Supreme Council for Cyberspace, which includes members of the hard- line judiciary.

The 2009 protests were considered the first time that Twitter and social media were widely used to organize protests – a model replicated when the Arab Spring movement erupted across the region the following year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China