The Daily Telegraph

Facebook ‘has no quarrel with the Russians’

Clegg responds after parent company Meta faces criminal prosecutio­n over death threats to Putin

- By James Titcomb

THE owner of Facebook has “no quarrel with the Russian people”, Sir Nick Clegg said, after the company was declared an “extremist organisati­on” by the Kremlin.

Meta’s global affairs chief said the changes to its hate speech policies allowing death threats against Vladimir Putin only applied in Ukraine and were “focused on protecting people’s rights to speech as an expression of selfdefenc­e in reaction to a military invasion of their country”.

There were no changes on hate speech “as far as the Russian people are concerned”, Sir Nick said, adding that they were temporary and would be kept under review.

Russia’s Investigat­ive Committee, which reports to Mr Putin, said it had launched a “criminal case” against Meta, claiming its employees had illegally called for violence against Russian citizens. The telecoms regulator Roskomnadz­or yesterday banned Instagram, which is also owned by Meta, a week after blocking Facebook.

“A criminal case has been initiated ... in connection with illegal calls for murder and violence against citizens of the Russian Federation by employees of the American company Meta, which owns the social networks Facebook and Instagram,” the Investigat­ive Committee said.

Russian state media reported that Whatsapp could be left out of the ban because it is a communicat­ion service.

The move came after Facebook said it would let users make death threats against Vladimir Putin and call for violence against Russian soldiers, in a rare reversal of a hate speech policy.

The social network’s rules will be applied to users in eastern European countries including Russia, Poland and Ukraine. Calls for violence against Russian citizens will remain banned.

Moderators in the region have been informed of the policy in recent days, and also applies to Instagram.

“As a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine we have temporaril­y made allowances for forms of political expression that would normally violate our rules like violent speech such as ‘death to the Russian invaders’.

“We still won’t allow credible calls for violence against Russian civilians,” a Meta spokesman said.

Calls for the deaths of Mr Putin and Belarusian president Alexander Lukashenko will be allowed as long as they do not contain two indicators that a threat is credible, such as a location and method.

Meta told moderators the change was a “spirit-of-the-policy” allowance.

Facebook was banned in Russia last week, in apparent retaliatio­n for blocking the accounts of state broadcaste­rs

RT and Sputnik in the UK and EU.

Twitter and Youtube have also restricted the accounts. The communicat­ions regulator said it had identified 26 cases of “discrimina­tion” against Russian media by Facebook.

Downloads of Facebook in Russia have soared in recent days despite the ban, with millions in the country using virtual private networks to circumvent Russia’s internet controls.

Installati­ons have climbed from around 13,000 a day two weeks ago to more than 22,000 in recent days, according to analysis company Appfigures.

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