“Calls for murder” of Russians | Russia restricts access to Instagram

(San Francisco) Russia announced on Friday that it would restrict access to the social network Instagram, which it accuses of spreading calls for violence against Russians in connection with the conflict in Ukraine.

Posted at 3:02 p.m.

Daniel HOFFMAN
France Media Agency

Russia’s powerful Investigative Committee earlier said it was prosecuting Meta for ‘calling for the murder’ of Russians after the parent company of Instagram and Facebook eased its rules on violent posts aimed at the military and leaders Russians.

The organization specified launching these investigations “because of the illegal calls for the murder of Russian nationals on the part of the collaborators of the American company Meta”.

And according to the Attorney General’s office, “content distributed on Instagram contains calls to commit violent acts against citizens of Russia, including military personnel”.

Russian telecommunications regulator Roskomnadzor said access to Instagram would be limited from Monday to give users time to transfer their data to other networks.

Meta said on Thursday that it was making exceptions to its policy on incitement to violence and hatred, by not removing posts hostile to the military and Russian leaders.

“Due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, we are making leniency for forms of political expression that would normally violate our rules on violent speech such as ‘death to the Russian invaders,'” confirmed to the AFP Andy Stone, head of communications at Meta.

“We continue to not allow credible calls for violence against Russian civilians,” he added.

Russia had already blocked Facebook on its territory last week in retaliation for the Californian group’s decision to ban media close to the government (including the RT channel and the Sputnik site) in Europe.

The UN concerned about Meta’s decision

Sites or applications with limited access generally become largely inaccessible. This is already the case for Twitter, targeted by this same restriction measure after the start of the military operation in Ukraine on February 24.

The Instagram application is extremely popular with Russian youth. Above all, it has also become a crucial online sales tool for many Russian small and medium-sized businesses, as well as artists and artisans, who depend on their visibility on this platform for a living.

Only 7.5 million Russians used Facebook in 2021, or 7.3% of Internet users in the country, compared to 51 million for Instagram, according to the specialized firm eMarketer.

On Friday, Facebook President of International Affairs Nick Clegg clarified that the updated incitement to hatred and violence policy will only apply in Ukraine and insisted that it will was a “temporary decision taken in extraordinary and unprecedented circumstances”.

The Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights of the United Nations expressed concern on Friday about this decision by the American company.

“This is very clearly a very, very complex subject, but one which raises concerns in terms of human rights and international humanitarian law”, explained Elizabeth Throssell, spokesperson for the Office of the High Commissioner, during a press briefing in Geneva.

The vagueness surrounding this announcement “could certainly contribute to hate speech directed against Russians in general,” she said.

Meta did not react to a request from AFP on Friday.

“Rules of War in Real Time”

For Emerson Brooking, a researcher at the Atlantic Council, an American think tank, the exceptions authorized by Meta represent an attempt to adapt to an extremely fluid and tense situation.

“Facebook is trying to write rules of war in real time”, summarizes this specialist in online disinformation to AFP. “War and violence are inextricably linked, it is impossible to separate them. »

He recognizes that there is a risk of overflow which could harm the Russian population, beyond its military and political leaders alone.

“We observe throughout history that the violent actions of one country against another lead to calls for violence, intolerance or hatred against foreigners associated with the aggressor country,” he explains. “One can think of the persecutions in the United States against the Germans during the First World War or against the Japanese during the Second World War. »

However, the change proposed by Facebook “clearly disapproves of calls for the dehumanization of all Russians,” recalls Mr. Brooking.

This is not the first time that Mark Zuckerberg’s group has tolerated this kind of publication, even if examples are rare: in June 2021, the network had thus authorized for two weeks messages from Iranian opponents calling for the death of the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.


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