Khaleej Times

Turkey tells Twitter to open office, pay tax

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istanbul — Turkey urged executives from Twitter to open an office and start paying Turkish tax on Monday in the first direct talks since a two-week ban imposed on the site as the government battled a corruption scandal.

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan’s government blocked Twitter and YouTube in March, drawing internatio­nal condemnati­on, after audio recordings, purportedl­y showing corruption in his inner circle, were leaked on their sites.

The block was lifted 10 days ago after the constituti­onal court ruled that it breached freedom of expression, a decision Erdogan has since said was wrong and should be overturned. YouTube remains largely blocked in Turkey.

The prime minister on Saturday accused Twitter of being a “tax evader”, repeating his combative stance ahead of the talks between his government and the San Francisco-based company.

“Twitter, YouTube, Facebook, these are internatio­nal companies. They’re companies establishe­d for profit,” he said at the opening ceremony for a purificati­on plant in Istanbul.

“We will deal with them. They will come like every internatio­nal company and comply with my country’s constituti­on, laws and tax rules,” CNN Turk reported Erdogan as saying.

A senior Turkish official told Reuters that Twitter’s head of global public policy, Colin Crowell, was holding two rounds of talks in Ankara with the aim of opening up a better channel of communicat­ion. He described the first meeting as “positive”. —

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