Afghanistan orders suspension of WhatsApp and Telegram

So far, the state-owned Salaam Network is the only internet provider to obey the order, which applies from November 1 to November 20, said telecommunications ministry spokesman Najib Nangyalay

FILE PHOTO: The WhatsApp messaging application is seen on a phone screen August 3, 2017.   REUTERS/Thomas White/File Photo
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Afghanistan has ordered the suspension of WhatsApp and Telegram to resolve "technical problems", officials said on Saturday, sparking outcry among social media users.

Facebook-owned WhatsApp and Telegram are popular messaging apps among smartphone-using Afghans — including Taliban and ISIL militants.

So far, the state-owned Salaam Network is the only internet provider to obey the order, which applies from November 1 to November 20, said telecommunications ministry spokesman Najib Nangyalay.

"We are testing a new technology and WhatsApp and Telegram will be temporarily blocked," he said.

"It is not a blow to the freedom of communication in Afghanistan — we have access to Facebook, Twitter. We are committed to the freedom of expression."

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Acting telecommunications minister Shahzad Aryobee said the move was in response to dissatisfaction with the services — something industry insiders rejected.

"In order to improve the services and solve the technical problems of these two programmes the ministry of telecommunication and information technology is considering to introduce a new technology," Mr Aryobee said in a Facebook post on Friday.

The move has ignited a firestorm on social media with users describing the move to block the messaging services as an assault on their right to free speech.

"Blocking WhatsApp and Telegram is the beginning of censorship by the Afghan government and bringing the virtual world under their control in Afghanistan. I think this is intolerable," Facebook user Abdullah wrote.

Another user, Mahdi Yasir, said the quality of WhatsApp and Telegram "are great" and urged the government to focus on closing "factories producing Pakistani suicide bombers" instead.

A telecommunications official scoffed at the government's claim to be developing a new technology.

"They are not going to match an international standard app," he said.

"WhatsApp is very popular because it uses less data and the quality is very good.

"It could be security related [but] if they block it people can access VPNs," he added, referring to virtual private networks.

Around eight million people, largely in Afghanistan's major cities, can access the internet, up from almost none during the Taliban's repressive 1996-2001 regime. Most do so through mobile phones.

The Taliban frequently uses WhatsApp to post statements in Afghanistan while ISIL militants favour Telegram.