Twitter will close some accounts in Turkey but will not for now set up
an office there as the government wants, a senior Turkish official said
late on Monday after talks over a dispute which saw the government ban
the site for two weeks.
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 Twitter block was lifted 11 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 blocked in Turkey.
[jpost.com]
15/4/14
--
-
Related:
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 Twitter block was lifted 11 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 blocked in Turkey.
[jpost.com]
15/4/14
--
-
Related:
Blocking Twitter was mistake, says Turkey’s EU minister...
ReplyDeleteTurkey made a mistake in blocking access to Twitter, its EU Minister Volkar Bozkır has said.
“I wish we had not closed Twitter. It was wrong. Everybody accessed [the site] anyway. Now we’re trying to restore a wrong perception [about Turkey],” Bozkır was reported by daily Haberturk as saying on Oct. 5.
Turkey blocked access to Twitter on March 20, hours after then Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who became the president on Aug. 28, vowed to close down the social media platform, triggering both domestic and international reaction.
On April 3, the microblogging site was unblocked, 24 hours after the Constitutional Court ruled that the ban was a violation of free speech. The company now is now in talks to open a Turkey office.
Erdoğan admitted that he was “increasingly against the Internet every day,” according to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), who met with the president in Ankara on Oct. 2.
In the same Haberturk interview, Bozkır also said Turkey does not have the luxury to announce that it does not need to be a full member of the European Union, stressing that the bloc is still a very big economic player..................http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/blocking-twitter-was-mistake-says-turkeys-eu-minister.aspx?pageID=238&nID=72567&NewsCatID=339
5/10/14