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A Moscow court said on Monday that Meta was guilty of “extremist activity”, but the ruling will not affect its WhatsApp messenger service, focusing on the U.S. firm’s already-banned Facebook and Instagram social networks.

Meta did not respond to requests for comment after Moscow’s Tverskoi District Court said in a press statement that it had upheld a lawsuit filed by state prosecutors on banning the company’s activities on Russian territory.

Meta‘s lawyer Victoria Shakina had earlier told the court that the company was not carrying out extremist activities and was against Russophobia, the Interfax news agency reported.

It was not clear whether Meta would appeal the outlawing of the activities of Facebook and Instagram in Russia “on the grounds of realizing extremist activity”, a ban TASS cited judge Olga Solopova as saying would be enforced immediately.

Late on Monday, communications regulator Roskomnadzor said it will exclude Meta from the list of foreign entities operating on the Internet in Russia, and Instagram and Facebook from the register of social networks, according to news agencies.

Roskomnadzor also said that Russian media must label Meta and its social networks as prohibited when distributing information and are forbidden to display their logos.

Russia has in the past designated groups such as the Taliban and Islamic State as “extremist” but later expanded this to the Jehovah’s Witnesses and jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation.

Facebook last year had 7.5 million users in Russia and WhatsApp had 67 million, researcher Insider Intelligence estimates, while Instagram has said its ban will affect 80 million users in Russia.

UKRAINE TENSIONS

The implications of the ruling remain unclear as Facebook and Instagram are already banned in Russia and the court said WhatsApp would be unaffected by its ruling.

“The decision does not apply to the activities of Meta‘s messenger WhatsApp, due to its lack of functionality for the public dissemination of information,” the court said.

Russia initially banned Facebook for restricting access to Russian media while Instagram was blocked earlier this month after Meta said it would allow social media users in Ukraine to post messages urging violence against Russian President Vladimir Putin and troops Moscow sent into Ukraine.

Russia has continued to call the conflict a “special military operation” to disarm Ukraine and protect it from people it describes as dangerous nationalists.

Meta has since narrowed its guidance to prohibit calls for the death of a head of state and said its guidance should never be interpreted as condoning violence against Russians in general.

But the perceived threat to its citizens angered Russian authorities and led to the criminal case against Meta.

WHATSAPP’S FATE

It was not immediately clear how the WhatsApp messaging service would be able to continue operating, since the court has put a stop to Meta‘s commercial activities.

Analysis of mobile internet traffic on Monday showed that Telegram, popular in Russia for a long time, has overtaken WhatsApp to become the country’s most used messaging tool in recent weeks.

The prosecution sought to allay fears that people who find ways around bans on Meta‘s services may face criminal charges.

“Individuals will not be prosecuted simply for using Meta‘s services,” TASS cited the prosecutor as saying in court.

But human rights lawyer Pavel Chikov said neither the court nor the prosecutor could guarantee the safety of Facebook or Instagram users, warning that any public displays of Meta symbols – on websites, shop entrances, on business cards – could be grounds for administrative charges and up to 15 days in jail.

“Buying adverts on both social networks or trading Meta‘s shares may qualify as financing extremism activity – this is a criminal offence,” he wrote on Telegram.

WhatsApp may have been left alone due to the extent of its everyday use among Russians and by government agencies and state companies for customer support, Sarkis Darbinyan, head of the legal department at digital rights group Roskomsvoboda, said.

Another reason is likely to be to avoid any backlash.

“The government is trying not to close everything at once, but gradually, so that people slowly get used to it,” he told Reuters, pointing to the “unpopular” closure of Instagram.

“We assume that services like WhatsApp could come under blocks at any moment,” Darbinyan added.

Copyright 2022 Thomson/Reuters

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