The Borneo Post

Pompeo: US ‘looking at’ banning TikTok, other Chinese apps

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WASHINGTON: Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has said the US is ‘looking at’ banning Chinese social media apps, including TikTok, over allegation­s Beijing is using them to spy on users.

India has already barred the wildly popular TikTok app over national security and privacy concerns while other countries are reportedly mulling similar measures.

Asked on Monday by Fox News’s Laura Ingraham if the US should consider blocking the apps – ‘ especially Tik Tok’ – the country’s top diplomat said the Trump administra­tion was “taking this very seriously; we are certainly looking at it.”

Pompeo said the US had been working for a ‘ long time’ on the ‘problems’ of Chinese technology in infrastruc­ture and was “making real progress.”

“With respect to Chinese apps on people’s cell phones, I can assure you the United States will get this one right too,” he said.

“I don’t want to get out in front of the president, but it’s something we are looking at.” Pompeo earlier lashed out at what he called China’s ‘Orwellian’ moves to censor activists, schools and libraries in

Hong Kong under a sweeping new security law.

Authoritie­s in the financial hub have ordered schools to remove books for review under the law, which has criminalis­ed certain opinions such as calls for independen­ce or more autonomy.

Libraries in Hong Kong said they were pulling titles written by a handful of pro-democracy activists.

“The Chinese Communist Party’s destructio­n of free Hong Kong continues,” Pompeo said in a sharply worded statement.

“With the ink barely dry on the repressive National Security Law, local authoritie­s – in an Orwellian move – have now establishe­d a central government national security office, started removing books critical of the CCP from library shelves, banned political slogans, and are now requiring schools to enforce censorship,” he said.

Pompeo condemned what he called the “latest assaults on the rights and freedoms of the people of Hong Kong.”

“Until now, Hong Kong flourished because it allowed free thinking and free speech, under an independen­t rule of law. No more,” he said.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Photo shows the social media applicatio­n logo TikTok displayed on the screen of an iPhone, in Arlington, Virginia.
— AFP photo Photo shows the social media applicatio­n logo TikTok displayed on the screen of an iPhone, in Arlington, Virginia.

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