Gulf News

Iran: WhatsApp, Instagram to remain blocked

GLOBAL FIGURES, NOBEL LAUREATES URGE SUPPORT FOR PROTESTERS

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IThe two platforms will only be allowed to operate if they have a legal representa­tive in the country who is responsibl­e for their users’ activities.”

Ebrahim Raisi | Iran’s president

ran’s President Ebrahim Raisi has vowed that WhatsApp and Instagram will remain blocked in the country, blaming the online platforms for stoking protests that started over four months ago.

The Islamic republic was rocked by major demonstrat­ions after the mid-September death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian Kurd, after her arrest for allegedly breaching the country’s dress code for women.

Raisi charged that the two platforms, owned by US internet giant Meta, “were at the root of the insecurity in the country during the recent riots”, speaking on national television Tuesday evening.

“The two platforms will only be allowed to operate if they have a legal representa­tive in the country who is responsibl­e for their users’ activities,” the president said.

Telecommun­ications Minister Issa Zarepour said yesterday that the continued Whatsapp and Instagram blocks were approved by “the Supreme National Security Council in the presence of the president, the head of the judiciary and the head of parliament”.

Blocked services

The online services were the most widely used in Iran after authoritie­s earlier blocked access to Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Telegram and TikTok.

Raisi also said that he had “told the country’s leaders that internet disruption­s were causing discontent” among the population of Iran, which has become a highly connected country in recent years.

Former government spokesman Ali Rabiei warned late last month that the activities of “about three million companies and the jobs of 12 million people” were linked to the internet in Iran.

Joint plea

Meanwhile, hundreds of global figures from Nobel laureates to actors have issued a joint plea urging “unstinting” support for Iranians protesting against their country’s regime in defiance of a bloody crackdown. A statement issued yesterday by US-based rights group Freedom House said the protesters’ “victory would mean deliveranc­e from a regime that denies free elections, free speech, due process of law, and personal autonomy in matters as simple as the choice of clothing”.

It was signed by some 480 global figures, Freedom House said, including NobelPrize-winning writer Svetlana Alexievich, former US secretary of state Hillary Clinton, and actor Richard Gere.

The “end of the Islamic republic’s system of misogyny would constitute a global landmark in the long march toward a world in which women are treated equally”, the statement said, adding: “They [protesters] deserve unstinting support from freedom-loving people around the world.”

Iranians have kept up acts of defiance in the face of a crackdown that has so far seen four men executed over the protests and at least 14,000 people arrested.

Iranian figures who signed the statement include some of the most prominent exiles backing the protest movement, such as US-based dissident Masih Alinejad, actor Golshifteh Farahani who lives in France, footballer Ali Karimi, and Reza Pahlavi, the son of the ousted shah.

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