Turkey began unblocking Instagram late Saturday evening after depriving access to millions of users for nine days.
The transport and infrastructure minister Abdulkadir Uraloglu said on X, “Following our negotiations with representatives of Instagram, we will unblock access starting from 9:30 pm (1830 GMT) after they agreed to respond to our demands."
Instagram access began to progressively return after that time, AFP reporters noted.
“Since the beginning, we have wanted social media platforms to respect the laws of the Republic,” Uraloglu insisted.
The platform had been blocked since the morning of August 2 for reasons that were never fully explained.
Saturday evening the minister mentioned “violations linked to content”, adding that Instagram had refused to delete thousands of posts involving “gambling, drugs and abuse of children”.
Meta, the owner of Instagram, denied not cooperating, saying it had withdrawn almost 2,500 posts in the first half of the year at the request of Turkish authorities.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s communications director, Fahrettin Altun, accused Instagram of blocking messages of condolence for Ismael Haniyeh, political leader of the Palestinian group Hamas and a close ally of Erdogan’s.
Haniyeh was killed in Tehran last month in an attack blamed on Israel.
Meta apologised Tuesday for removing social media posts by Malaysian Prime Minister, Anwar Ibrahim, about the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh.
The apology came a day after Anwar’s office summoned Meta representatives to seek an explanation on why the leader’s Facebook and Instagram posts about Haniyeh’s death had been removed.
Between 60 and 70 percent of Turkey’s 85 million inhabitants have an Instagram account, and about $57 million of business is carried out on the site each day, according to Emre Ekmekci, vice-president of an e-commerce association.
Access to the online game Roblox, particularly popular in Turkey, remained blocked for a fourth day Saturday evening.
In February, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg gave a public apology in the United States Congress as lawmakers grilled tech chiefs over the dangers that children face on social media platforms.
The executives convened by the US Senate Judiciary Committee were put to task in a session titled ‘Big Tech and the Online Child Sexual Exploitation Crisis.’
AFP