Telegram back in India as Govt's temporary ban expires
The Indian government had imposed a blanket ban on Telegram and its associated web services until 22 June.
PTI
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Telegram CEO alleged that Reliance and WhatsApp were lobbying to ban the app in India (AI)
New Delhi, 23 June
Instant messaging platform Telegram began returning to
service in India on Tuesday after a week-long government ban expired, with the
app reappearing on Google's Play Store while remaining unavailable on Apple's
App Store for several hours.
The platform had already become accessible to some existing
users early on Tuesday morning before Google formally restored downloads. As of
around 12 noon, Telegram remained delisted from Apple's App Store. Apple did
not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment. Existing Telegram users on Apple iPhones were, however, able to use the messaging service.
The Indian government had imposed a blanket ban on Telegram
and its associated web services until 22 June, citing the platform's failure to
curb the circulation of leaked and fake National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test(NEET) examination papers, misleading content and other fraudulent activities
linked to the country's medical entrance examination process.
Telegram had challenged the temporary blocking order before
the Delhi High Court. However, the court ruled on Friday that the restrictions
were lawful, proportionate and necessary to safeguard the integrity of a
national medical entrance examination. The court also rejected Telegram's
contention that the government had acted arbitrarily or failed to follow due
process.
Sources familiar with the matter said there had been no
extension or modification to the government's order. Before imposing the ban,
officials met Telegram representatives on 3 June and flagged concerns over the
platform's role in the spread of examination-related fraud. The Centre
subsequently ordered internet service providers and app stores to block
Telegram, its web version and related links until 22 June.
Telegram has separately been directed to disable its
message-editing feature until 30 June, according to government instructions. The
restrictions coincided with the NEET re-examination held on 21 June.
Authorities have so far reported no major instances of fraudulent activity
linked to the test.
Telegram Founder and Chief Executive Pavel Durov criticised
the move, saying India's Information Technology Ministry had banned the app
"for one week because some users shared leaked exam questions".
Durov also alleged that Reliance, together with rival
messaging platform WhatsApp, may have lobbied for the restriction.
The Telegram CEO alleged that Reliance and WhatsApp were lobbying to ban the app in India and sabotage its global access. Durov claimed
that an Indian telecom provider deliberately disrupted Telegram's international
traffic -- affecting users in places like the UAE -- using a routing
manipulation technique called Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) hijacking. He
further claimed that Meta Platforms -- the parent company of WhatsApp -- held a
partial stake in Reliance.
Reliance Jio strongly rejected the BGP hijacking
allegations, stating its network operates strictly in line with global routing
standards. Telecom industry sources also pointed out that Durov appeared to
confuse separate entities, likely mixing up Reliance Communications with
Reliance Industries Limited (which owns Jio).
The temporary suspension marked one of India's most sweeping
actions against a major messaging platform, underscoring growing regulatory
scrutiny of digital services amid concerns over exam-related fraud and online
misinformation.
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