Telegram breaks silence after Durov arrest
Company CEO Pavel Durov is not responsible for any misuse of his platform, Telegram said in a statement on Sunday
Pavel Durov delivers a keynote speech at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain, February 23, 2016 © Getty Images / Manuel Blondeau
Telegram has broken its silence following the arrest of its founder Pavel Durov by French authorities on Saturday, insisting the tech entrepreneur “has nothing to hide.”
Durov was taken into custody at Paris-Le Bourget Airport, immediately after arriving from Azerbaijan by private jet. According to French media, prosecutors in Paris plan to charge the 39-year-old with complicity in drug trafficking, pedophilia offenses, and fraud, arguing that Telegram’s insufficient content moderation, its strong encryption tools, and its alleged lack of cooperation with police allow criminals to flourish on the app.
Telegram dismissed the accusations on Sunday, stating that the company follows EU laws and that its content-moderation policies are “within industry standards.”
“Pavel Durov has nothing to hide and travels frequently in Europe,” the statement continued, calling it “absurd to claim that a platform or its owner are responsible for abuse of that platform.”
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“Almost a billion users globally use Telegram as means of communication and as a source of vital information,” the company concluded. “We’re awaiting a prompt resolution of this situation.”
Telegram is headquartered in Dubai, although the company appointed a Belgian legal representative earlier this year to manage its compliance with EU law. Telegram has also complied with the bloc’s anti-Russian sanctions by blocking access to Russian news outlets, including RT.
However, Durov has reportedly consistently refused to hand over user data to law enforcement agencies, or to install so-called ‘backdoors’ so that these agencies can surveil conversations on the app.
Speaking to RT on Sunday, Durov’s former spokesman suggested that French authorities could have made the arrest on behalf of the US, after the tech entrepreneur publicly accused American intelligence agencies of pressuring him into giving them access to Telegram user data.