WhatsApp criticised restrictions to its service in Russia yesterday, accusing the authorities of trying to deprive more than 100 million Russians of the right to private communications before the holiday season.
WhatsApp’s statement followed a repeat warning by Russia’s communications regulator that it would completely block WhatsApp if it did not comply with its demands to bring its services into line with Russian law.
“WhatsApp continues to violate Russian law. The messenger is used to organise and carry out terrorist acts on the territory of the country, to recruit their perpetrators and to commit fraud and other crimes against our citizens,” Roskomnadzor, the regulator, told Russian state media.
It said it was taking measures to gradually restrict WhatsApp, owned by Meta Platforms, as a result. Thousands of Russians complained about outages and slowdowns yesterday.
A dispute with foreign tech providers intensified after Moscow’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, with Russia blocking Meta’s Facebook and Instagram, slowing the speed of Alphabet’s YouTube and issuing hundreds of fines to platforms that failed to comply with Russian rules on online content and data storage.