Business Standard

Saudi lifting Skype, WhatsApp ban but will censor calls

- STEPHEN KALIN

The Saudi government is lifting a ban on calls made through online apps on Thursday but will monitor and censor them, a government spokespers­on said.

All online voice and video call services — like Microsoft’s Skype, Facebook’s WhatsApp and Messenger, and Rakuten’s Viber — which satisfy regulatory requiremen­ts were set to become accessible overnight.

However, on Thursday morning, Messenger and Viber appeared to remain blocked inside the kingdom.

Adel Abu Hameed, spokespers­on for telecom regulator CITC, said on Arabiya TV on Wednesday that new regulation­s were aimed mainly at protecting users’ personal informatio­n and blocking content that violated the kingdom’s laws.

Asked if the apps could be monitored by the authoritie­s or companies, he said: “Under no circumstan­ces can the user use an applicatio­n for video or voice calling without monitoring and censorship by the Communicat­ions and Informatio­n Technology Commission, whether the applicatio­n is global or local.”

Saudi Arabia, which introduced blocks to internet communicat­ions from 2013, along with its Gulf Arab neighbours have been wary that such services could be used by activists and militants.

Gulf Arab states, except the island kingdom of Bahrain, were mostly spared the “Arab Spring” mass protests often organised over the Internet which roiled much of the region in 2011. Lifting the ban represents part of the Saudi government’s broad reforms to diversify the economy partly in response to low oil prices, which have hit the country’s finances. Yet the policy reversal could squeeze Saudi Arabia’s three main telecom operators — Saudi Telecom Co (STC), Etihad Etisalat (Mobily) and Zain Saudi — which earn revenue from internatio­nal phone calls made by the millions of expatriate­s living in the kingdom. REUTERS

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Lifting the ban represents part of the Saudi government’s broad reforms to diversify the economy partly in response to low oil prices, which have hit the country’s finances
PHOTO: REUTERS Lifting the ban represents part of the Saudi government’s broad reforms to diversify the economy partly in response to low oil prices, which have hit the country’s finances

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