Russia sues social media companies over Navalny protests

Technology

Authorities in Russia are cracking down on social media companies in the wake of protests following the arrest of opposition leader Alexei Navalny.

It comes as the country’s media regulator Roskomnadzor also announced that it was throttling citizens’ access to Twitter, accusing the American company of failing to remove thousands of posts relating to drugs and pornography.

A dozen complaints have been filed in a court in Moscow against Telegram, Facebook, Twitter, TikTok and Google which are accused of failing to remove content calling for teenagers to attend unauthorised protests following Mr Navalny‘s arrest.

Alexei Navalny draws a heart as he is sentenced to prison
Image:
Alexei Navalny draws a heart as he is sentenced to prison

Even the wife of the Russian opposition leader was ordered to pay a fine of 20,000 roubles (£192.33) after attending a protest in February demanding her husband’s release from prison.

Yulia Navalnaya’s punishment comes after tens of thousands of people demonstrated in dozens of Russian cities in what was then the latest round of anti-Putin protests, chanting slogans against the Russian leader and calling for the release of Mr Navalny.

In a statement from the Kremlin, the Russian government said that Moscow had no desire to block anything, but stressed that companies needed to follow Russian law.

Mr Putin had passed a law in 2019 which gave Roskomnadzor the authority to block social media platforms if they were deemed to have discriminated against Russia.

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As the throttling came into effect on Tuesday a number of Russian government websites also went down, including those for the Kremlin and for Roskomnadzor.

Officials said the outages were unrelated to the Twitter action and instead caused by technical issues at Rostelecom, the country’s partially public-owned internet provider.

According to the regulator, Twitter had failed to remove content inciting the suicide of minors, providing information on drug use, and containing indecent images of children.

Roskomnadzor said it had “filed over 28,000 preliminary and repeated orders to delete unlawful links and publications,” of which 3,168 remain unblocked.

Twitter has not responded to requests to comment on the allegations.

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